This research aims to examine the constructivism theory in Arabic language learning, its implications on the design, implementation, and evaluation of Arabic language learning, as well as its advantages and disadvantages. This research adopts a literature study approach to investigate the implications of constructivism in Arabic language learning. The analysis technique involves searching, selecting, evaluating, and analyzing relevant literature. The findings indicate that: (1) Constructivism theory supports active, meaningful, contextual, and socially interactive Arabic language learning. (2) Constructivist Arabic language learning: interaction, authentic tasks, collaboration, resources, feedback. Objectives: knowledge, communication, independence, cultural appreciation. (3) The implementation of constructivism in Arabic language learning involves the teacher as a facilitator and the students as knowledge constructors, emphasizing meaningful interaction and understanding. (4) The implications of constructivism in evaluating Arabic language learning include formative assessment, portfolios, authentic evaluation, process-oriented evaluation, diverse evaluation methods, and holistic student development. (5) Advantages of constructivism: student empowerment, meaningful learning, critical thinking skills. Disadvantages: time constraints, prior knowledge, focus on individuality. Benefits: effective understanding and use of the Arabic language.
Isop Syafei (Tue,) studied this question.