Education is often compared to construction, yet traditional pedagogical practices frequently resemble chaotic material dumping rather than intentional architectural design. This paper explores the visual and conceptual metaphor of bricklaying with cement: on one side, unstructured information is heaped upon a disordered pile of bricks, representing “content dumping”; on the other, mortar is applied carefully and sequentially to build a coherent wall, symbolizing didactic structuring. Drawing on Paulo Freire’s critique of the banking model of education, schema theory, cognitive load theory, and the Anthropological Theory of the Didactic (ATD), we argue that mere content transmission does not ensure learning. Rather, only the deliberate construction of didactic sequences—progressive, scaffolded, and cumulative—creates enduring cognitive architecture. Through theoretical synthesis and pedagogical analysis, this paper demonstrates that structured sequencing transforms teaching from an act of content delivery into one of cognitive construction.
Zen Revista (Mon,) studied this question.
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