How We Think
Tipo de documento
Autores
Lista de autores
Schoenfeld, Alan
Resumen
My main goal for this paper is to introduce a theory of decision-making – a theory that provides a way of explaining how and why people make the decisions they do, in the middle of complex activities such as teaching. My current research has evolved from my earlier problem solving work on problem solving (Schoenfeld, 1985), so to set the stage for this discussion I will briefly describe that work – what it showed, and the questions it did not answer. That will allow me to describe what a complete theory should be able to accomplish. I then turn to the main body of this paper, three studies of teaching. In those examples I show how, under certain circumstances, it is possible to model the act of teaching, to the point where one can provide a grounded explanation of every decision that a teacher makes during an extended episode of teaching. Following that, I give some other examples to show that the theory is general, and I make a few concluding comments.
Fecha
2012
Tipo de fecha
Estado publicación
Términos clave
Estrategias de solución | Gestión de aula | Reflexión sobre la enseñanza
Enfoque
Nivel educativo
Educación infantil, preescolar (0 a 6 años) | Educación media, bachillerato, secundaria superior (16 a 18 años) | Educación primaria, escuela elemental (6 a 12 años) | Educación secundaria básica (12 a 16 años)
Idioma
Revisado por pares
Formato del archivo
Referencias
Clancey, W. J., & Shortliffe, E. H. (Eds). (1984). Readings in medical AI: The first decade. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley. Schoenfeld, A. H. (1985). Mathematical problem solving. Orlando, FL: Academic Press. Schoenfeld, A. H. (1998b). Toward a theory of teaching-in-context. Issues in Education, 4(1), 1-94. Schoenfeld, A. H. (Ed.) (2008). A study of teaching: Multiple lenses, multiple views. (Journal for research in Mathematics Education monograph series # 14). Reston, VA: National Council of Teachers of Mathematics. Schoenfeld, A. H. (2010). How We Think: A Theory of Goal-Oriented Decision Making and its Educational Applications. New York: Routledge. Groopman, J. (2007). How doctors think. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.