Abstract
RADICAL CONSTRUCTIVISTS BELIEVE that knowledge is not disembodied but intimately related to the action and experience of the learner. It is always contextual and never separated from the knower. There is no objective reality that is independent of human mental activity. Radical constructivism shares many philosophical perspectives with the semiotic model of Stamper (1993). Semiotics claims that knowledge of the world is mediated through signs. A radical subjective synthesis of semiotics and radical constructivism leads to two axioms: There is no known reality without an agent, and the agent constructs reality through his action. This paper begins with a brief review of the philosophies of radical constructivism and semiotics, followed by a discussion of the implications of semiotics for radical constructivist learning. It concludes with the design of a constructivist learning environment using the semiotic perspective as manifested by Stamper.
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Lorna Uden is a Senior Lecturer in computing science at the School of Computing, Staffordshire University, UK. Her interests include technology in learning, constructivism, problem-based learning, software engineering, human-computer interaction, object oriented design, multimedia, internet learning, CSCW and activity theory. Dr. Uden has been researching in the areas of educational technology and object-oriented design methods. She has published over 20 journal and conference papers on these topics and has developed a Courseware Methodology for technology-based learning.
Kecheng Liu is a Professor at the School of Computing where he holds a chair, Staffordshire University, UK. He has published fifty papers in conferences and journals, such asInternational Journal of Information Management, Journal of Behaviour andInformation Technology. His research interests span from requirements studies, systems analysis and design, object methods for systems engineering, normative modelling for software agents, to HCI and CSCW. He is the founder of a post graduate specialist research course of Information Systems with Semiotics. Dr. Liu has received grants from various research councils and has served in a number of national and international conference committees.
Gary Shank is an Associate Professor for the Department of Foundations and Leadership in the School of Education at Duquesne University. He studied semiotics at Indiana University with Donald Cunningham and Thomas Sebeok and is now working on linking qualitative methods and semiotic theory. He has published inTheory and Psychology andContemporary Educational Psychology and has a text on qualitative methods forthcoming from Prentice Hall.
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Uden, L., Liu, K. & Shank, G. Linking radical constructivism and semiotics to design a constructivist learning environment. J. Comput. High. Educ. 12, 34–51 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02940955
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02940955