Interactive Constructivism in Education PDF
Interactive Constructivism in Education PDF
Interactive Constructivism in Education PDF
Kersten Reich
Abstract
Interactive constructivism and its implications for education will be introduced
in four steps. (1) The context of the approach and its relation to other constructiv-
ist developments will be discussed. (2) I will examine essential pragmatic criteria
in the tradition of John Dewey that are relevant for interactive constructivism.
(3) More decisively than Dewey interactive constructivism launches a meta-theo-
retical distinction between observers, participants, and agents. (4) Communica-
tion as a chief dimension of education can be analyzed out of three perspectives:
the symbolic, the imaginative, and the real. Educators must recognize that their
interaction with learners includes great demands not only in practical application/
implementation but also in theoretical reflection.
(1) As an observer, we focus all our senses on what surrounds us and what we are
thinking and doing in our experience. We take the position of a self-observer when-
ever we reflect on our own experience. And we take the position of a distant-observer
whenever we observe others and judge their actions and articulations. We also take
the position of a distant-observer whenever we try to transcend our habitual posi-
tion of observing and look at ourselves critically from an imagined outside position.
Observers make observations. As shown in Figure 2, the observer is a position that
is always subjective. Each experience of observation has its singular moment. But
for interactive constructivism, observation is also always embedded in a cultural
Figure 2
Difficult within this concept is the claim that we have to realize two perspec-
tives in two steps. On the one hand we have to observe ourselves as if we could
look from the outside as an external observer. On the other hand we are always
looking from our inner position as a self-observer. My assertion is that we are able
to exceed the position of self-observing by interacting with others. The feedback
that we get in interactions may then be internalized and become a kind of inner
dialogue we lead with ourselves. In any case the tension between self- and dis-
tant-observing presupposes open-mindedness, self-criticism, tolerance of frus-
tration and ambivalence. Dewey already knew that some individuals have special
abilities to empathize with others. They are particularly sensible and can imagine
the expectations and interests of others. But cultural change, with an increase of
pluralism, diversity, cultural and migration differences, entails the necessity to
educate and nurture this sensitivity for all observers. In social communication
Figure 3
The aim of irony, for Rorty, is not arrogance but modesty. This position changes
our understanding of participation in education. Now it is the learners themselves
who must interpret the contexts they live in and decide about the kinds of partici-
pation they will and can take. But decisions are limited. Postmodern irony and
freedom is not appropriate for public matters like government and constitution,
for laws and justice, for liberties in political life. Here, at least the possibilities of
democratic participation on a larger scale have to be enabled. Education is one main
resource to gain habits that respect participation in groups and communities. For
Rorty, liberals must protect democratic political conditions to secure the possibility
of ironic self-reflection and the diversity of aesthetic lives. The point is to organize
private and public life in participative roles that support diversity and pluralism as
concrete choices of people with democratic orientations.
In postmodernity the contradiction between freedom and solidarity has
grown. As observers we enjoy, for example, the pluralism, diversity, heterogeneity,
and ambivalence of our observations. Here we can act very open and free. But as
participants in the ecstasies of such freedom we nevertheless need a frame of soli-
darity that provides sufficient support in an economic, social, cultural, political or
other sense. This necessary solidarity of participants delimits Rorty’s liberalism.
To balance between our observer and participant roles in learning, we have to ac-
knowledge that forgetfulness about the conditions of our participation in groups,
communities, and societies can be dangerous. Its puts at risk our own security as
well as the prosperity and democratic quality of the communities in which we par-
ticipate. Therefore a democratic education has to cultivate critical reflection on the
balance between observing and partaking roles. The interrelation between these
roles should not develop arbitrarily. Rorty’s ironic position is helpful here because
it suggests a way of combining the roles without taking refuge in one-sided or
dogmatic views that stand in opposition to our current life-world. But irony is not
sufficient for the necessary critical reflection. Here it seems fruitful to reconstruct
Dewey’s project of democratic education. This requires beyond irony the struggle
for more equity, social justice and political and communicative participation. This
is what critical educators all over the world experience day by day: their visions of
solidarity time and again have to face the threat of political or economical short-
comings. The must leave the position of an inner irony as well as the circle of a com-
munity of ironists if they are to participate more effectively in critical discourses
and actions. In comparison irony provides a more passive observer position. What
is needed is to penetrate more deeply into an understanding of the complex social
and cultural contexts of education and to participate in critical practice with a view
to further democratic contexts.
(3) As an agent, it often seems that we act without first observing. Moreover we
sometimes seem to be able to act without participating. But this at best only ap-
plies to very spontaneous action. As reflection shows, the appearance in most cases
is due to our being forgetful about the contexts of our actions—and then others
Figure 4
take steps, as opportunity presents itself, to enable young people to share with
their elders in enterprises which are intended to promote the common good. If
this end is to be satisfactorily achieved, however, all participation in such adult
enterprises—whether this participation be in the form of direct action or through
the imagination and the emotions—must have a reference to the progressive dis-
covery of the discrepancies and contradictions which lie back of our present-day
social living” (LW 11, 557).
For interactive constructivism, the systematic distinction between these
three perspectives marks points in common and differences between constructiv-
ism and pragmatism. Although already in Dewey one finds anticipations of the
distinction, it is not sufficiently developed as a critical part of a meta-theory. Such
theory gives us clues for observing others and ourselves more systematically. It is
also a prerequisite for reflecting on conditions of observation. Especially for educa-
tion in a democracy, the distinction is important. The change and diversity of per-
spectives thus envisioned is necessary in order for us to be able to relate increasing
freedom with chances of communication and participation under conditions of
solidarity (cf. Rorty 1989). With regard to the learner (student and teacher), s/he
must be seen as an active constructor of her own learning experiences (agent). In
order to learn, s/he must communicate with others in the contexts of a culture, i.e.
s/he partakes in a community of learning (participant). Observation is a necessary
condition for doing so and for reflecting on this doing (observer). Each of these
perspectives must provide sufficiently deep insights to avoid naïve and superficial
perspectives in education. This calls for additional reflections on communication,
learning, and teaching.
If we neglected one of these perspectives, our view would suffer a lack of
differentiation. We would see ourselves as observers only, involved in neither par-
ticipation nor action; we would overplay the importance of participation instead
of asking for a potential variety and diversity of observers or for more opportuni-
ties to act; we would remain in action for action’s sake, without reflecting upon
observations and conditions of participation that influence our actions or result
from them.
In order to consider the interrelation of the three roles more closely and more
precisely with regard to cultural contexts, I will introduce three further theoreti-
cal perspectives that are central to interactive constructivism.
uncritically, there are some interesting developments here that can broaden our
horizons. This is especially essential in discussing the imaginative. The imagi-
native prevents us from being able to see others the way they “are,” independent
from our own imaginative perspective. We encounter them with desire, emo-
tions, requests, and motives. Very often humans do not seem made for solidarity
and social coherence, focused as they are on their egocentric perspectives. Yet,
in our relationships we still depend, most of all, on our imaginations by means
of which we are connected with others, even if the connection may turn out to
be illusory. In education we need the imaginative as the desire that inspires us in
the relationships with others. It appears not only in emotional learning, but also
in those hopes and visions that guide all learning and inform it with insight and
meaning. In psychoanalysis the imaginative is a concept that among other things
reminds us of the unconscious dimensions of communication. What urges us to
do certain things? Why do these things and not others? What is it that determines
our preferences, omissions, sympathies, and antipathies? In our daydreams, many
things work that neither count nor are possible in the world. How often do we
wish to control our fellow humans’ imaginations—is not advertising the increas-
ing evidence hereof?
Already Dewey saw that at the beginning of every learning experience there
must be an imagination of what the problem is and how the learner may respond
to it. Without this imagination, there would be no reward in learning. Teachers
must invest all necessary educative efforts in providing opportunities for a sym-
bolic and imaginative learning so that the learners can imagine the meaning of
the experience. This is only possible if the teachers’ own imaginative desires are
alive. But Dewey discussed the combination of the symbolic and the imaginative
in a more rational and instrumental way. The critical examination of psychoanaly-
sis or other theories that are concerned with emotions and unconscious aspects
of our being is therefore lacking in his theory. In interactive constructivism we
try to give educators and teachers a broad introduction and critical discussion of
theories that overcome this lack, such as the philosophies of Lacan, Derrida, and
Levinas. In social-cognitive theories of education like Gardner’s or Coleman’s there
is a focus on emotions and emotional learning8 more than on the unconscious.
This stands in line with the tradition founded by Dewey.9 Especially the four core
categories mentioned above (experience, context, democracy, interaction) gain a
new quality if they are reflected with regard to the limits of communication and
education indicated by the illusion of complete comprehension of the imagina-
tive. Educators and teachers have to accept the limits of understanding the other
and themselves, and this tempers our view on educational communities and their
effects. Here again the point is to keep a balance between accepting the imagina-
tive as a limit of control and at the same time building on imaginative desire as
a resource for learning.
The real, in interactive constructivism, denotes those events that show the
fundamental relativity of all imaginative and symbolic orientations in our experi-
ing tendency toward specialization, neglect of social, cultural and political issues,
and detachment from practice. Therefore educators and teachers often make use
of popular advice literature and tend to ignore the more complex dimensions of
their practices. A growing number of educators and teachers, though, seem to be-
come more and more aware of the gap between theory and practice. The impact of
interactive constructivism in German teacher education demonstrates how a large
group is interested in complex issues of theory and a more profound reflection of
their own experiences and practices. For them it is necessary to provide theoretical
meta-perspectives on education: the distinction of roles as observer, participant,
and agent as well as the perspectives on the symbolic, the imaginative, and the real
can be useful here. Besides these concepts, which have been in the foreground of this
essay, interactive constructivism maintains a lot of other conceptual distinctions
,like the perspectives of construction (versions of subjective reality construction),
reconstruction (in the sense of cultural reproduction) and deconstruction (critical
perspectives on omissions in versions of reality) (cf. Reich 2005, 2006).
In pragmatism, especially Deweyan pragmatism, once we have reinvented it
for our time, we still find many resources for the proposed account of educational
visions and theses for their realization. Interactive constructivism tries to draw on
these sources and to further develop them. It tries to respond to the changed situ-
ation in our time, which is more characterized by ambivalence, ambiguity, and
lack of clarity than the time of classical pragmatism. Therefore, we have to enlarge
some views, change the direction of others, and introduce some new perspectives
on educational questions and answers. The aspects mentioned in this essay gave
a brief introduction and made some suggestions as to what directions and recon-
structions may be taken into consideration.
Notes
1. An interpretation of different approaches for constructivist thought is a major
topic in Reich (1998).
2. Cf. Vygotsky (1978, 1986) and Bruner (1983, 1984, 1990, 1996), Bruner/Haste
(1987).
3. On this, cf. e.g., paradigmatically, Watzlawick (1967, 1974, 1984).
4. On this, cf. as an introduction, Hickman/Neubert/Reich (2004). Cf. also, in
particular, Garrison (1997).
5. This is partly due to bad translations.
6. For the German introductions into the approach cf. Reich (1998, 2005, 2006).
7. Cf. for other approaches e.g., Science and Education (1997), Fosnot (1996),
Lambert et al. (1995, 1996), Larochelle et al. (1998), Steffe & Gale (1995), Tobin (1993)
among many others.
8. More recent approaches in brain research show the significance of emotions
for learning processes as well as social-cognitive psychology. Even if both approaches
differ in their reasons, they come to similar conclusions for practice.
9. Cf. Jim Garrison (1997) for the emotional in Dewey.
Kersten Reich is a professor of pedagogy and director of the Center for Dewey
Studies, University of Cologne, Germany.
Email: kersten.reich@uni.koeln.de