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Due to the pandemic undergraduate course, ECE 340: Constructivist Teaching with Young Children, moved to an online, asynchronous format. The in-person methods I used, group work, in-class activities, and discussion, could not be directly transposed online as might lecture and recitation. Toward the term's end students expressed appreciation for the degree of choice they had in assignments, examples of programs in text and video, and repeated opportunities to design centers and instruction. Some declared a greater sense of confidence as educators. The comments, suggested that the shift into an asynchronous provision of the course had been effective. This study is an investigation of the robustness of this response and the influence of course design on students' acquisition of constructivist teaching approaches.
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Aviva Dorfman (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/68e757abb6db6435876cf691 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.4148/2470-6353.1372
Aviva Dorfman
Networks An Online Journal for Teacher Research
University of Michigan–Flint
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