Knowledge-telling and knowledge-building - Deepstash
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Knowledge-telling and knowledge-building

It is important to understand the difference between knowledge-telling and knowledge building.

  • Knowledge-telling is a shallow engagement with knowledge, generally by reading or memorising without analysing or reflecting.
  • Knowledge-building is engaging deeply with study material by analysing it in-depth and looking at it from various angles.

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MORE IDEAS ON THIS

Alfred North Whitehead

“Education with inert ideas is not only useless: it is, above all things, harmful—Corruptio optimi, pessima [the corruption of the best is the worst of all].”

ALFRED NORTH WHITEHEAD

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Six types of abilities in the context of educational goals

Bloom's taxonomy describes six major types of abilities based on educational goals:

  • Remembering: Recalling the relevant information from long-term memory.
  • Understanding information: Interpreting it, summarising, explaining, and giving relevant ...

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Inert knowledge: Learning without understanding

Inert knowledge: Learning without understanding

Inert knowledge is learning information without understanding it, which means you have a limited ability to recognise, express or use it.

  • For example, memorising a math formula without understanding its meaning or implication. Students can learn stuff,...

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When knowledge is considered inert

The person knows something, but doesn't understand it, and can't do much with it.

  • They don't understand what the knowledge means, its implications, or how it connects to other knowledge.
  • When it's presented in different ways or contexts,

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Avoiding inert knowledge in education

There are two main approaches in education to avoid inert knowledge:

Teach in a way that encourages the development of active knowledge. When teaching students about a certain concept,

  • help them to understand what it means,
  • how it connects to oth...

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Lee S. Shulman

“You need facts to make sense; they are the basis for understanding, but they are never enough. Inertia as pathology describes those states of mind where people come to know something but simply can’t go beyond the facts, can’t synthesize them, think with them, or apply them in another situat...

LEE S. SHULMAN

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CURATED FROM

IDEAS CURATED BY

gauravb

Taking it one step at a time.

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Talent and Knowledge Core

The talent and knowledge core recipe is generally found in professional service firms, in various sectors like sports, consultancies, and entertainment.

They have star performers, and high-quality talent (physical or knowledge-based) to differentiate themselves and be profitable wi...

Establish a realistic sense of your own knowledge

Most of us overestimate our understanding of various subjects, known as the 'illusions of explanatory depth.' When you make an effort to explain a relevant issue or topic to yourself or someone else in detail, it will reveal the gaps in your knowledge and expose the illusion of e...

Opinion and specific knowledge

There is a difference between opinion or common belief and specific knowledge.

Opinion has a level of subjectivity and uncertainty. It varies according to someone's tastes or preferences. (You like chocolate more than ice-cream.) It is pointless to argue about this kind of opinion. 

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