Table of Contents

Situated Learning

General

Situated learning or situated cognition is a learning theory developed in the late 1980s by Jean Lave and Etienne Wenger and soon expanded by John Seely Brown and his colleagues. Situated learning theory is based on the assumption that knowledge should be presented in authentic context that involves its application. Both authors argue that learning should not be viewed as transmission of abstract and contextualized knowledge between individuals, but a social process within certain conditions which include activity, context and culture.

What is situated learning?

The claims of situated learning theory can roughly be divided in following categories:

What is the practical meaning of situated learning?

Since situational learning theory is not necessarily oriented on formal institutional sites of learning, it is also not necessarily orientated on improving the practice of educationalists and practices performed on those sites. Still, a model of how situated learning theory should affect instructional design was suggested in 1989 by Brown, Collins and Dugid. This model is called cognitive apprenticeship.

Criticisms

Some of the criticisms to situated learning theory state that3):

Keywords and most important names

Bibliography

Fox, Stephen. Situated learning theory versus traditional cognitive learning theory: Why management education should not ignore management learning. Systems Practice 10, no. 6: 727-747. 1997.

Anderson, John R., Lynne M. Reder, and Herbert A. Simon. Situated Learning and Education. Educational Researcher 25, no. 4: 5 -11. May 1, 1996.

Devlin, K. Supermarket Math. Saint Mary's College of California. Retrieved April 13, 2011.

Situated Learning Theory (Lave) at Learning Theories. Retrieved April 3, 2011.

Lave, J. Cognition in Practice: Mind, Mathematics and Culture in Everyday Life (Learning in Doing). NY: Cambridge University Press. 1988.

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Lave, Jean, and Etienne Wenger. Situated learning: legitimate peripheral participation. Cambridge University Press, 1991.

Fernandez, A., and M. A. Alonso García. The relative value of environmental contex reinstatement in free recall. Psicológica 22, no. 2: 253–266. 2001.

2)
Notice this approach is quite the opposite from cognitivist approach to learning, where knowledge and learning are isolated from other human activities and there is a mental capacity to be filled with knowledge.