|
Introductory Note to
the Reader Though Wilbert and I teach English in
different contexts, I am sure that we hold many similar approaches and ideas
regarding the learning of a second language such as English. This is just a joint effort to put
together his expertise with mine and try to come up with a thoughtful post
about the evolution of teaching models. Our intention is to offer educators,
students, and colleagues a conceptual map that promotes reflection on where
teaching has been, and where it is going, in an increasingly human–AI
collaborative world. |
From Mechanism to Meaning: Tracing the Evolution of Teaching Models (1.0–5.0)
|
|
Abstract This paper explores
the historical, philosophical, and technological development of teaching
models from Teaching 1.0 through Teaching 5.0, drawing on the collaborative
framework developed by Wilbert Salgado. Each stage reflects changing
epistemologies, pedagogical priorities, and conceptions of the
teacher–learner relationship. Using perspectives from positivism,
constructivism, connectivism, posthumanism, and human-centered design, the
essay examines how education has shifted from transmission-based instruction
to ethical, technology-integrated co-learning. The narrative combines
scholarly analysis with reflective commentary to help readers situate
themselves within this pedagogical continuum and consider how technology,
ethics, and empathy shape the future of teaching. |
Keywords: Teaching Models, Educational
Evolution, Constructivism, Connectivism, Posthumanism, Human-Centered Pedagogy,
Learning Technologies |
|
|
|
Resumen Este ensayo analiza la
evolución histórica, filosófica y tecnológica de los modelos de enseñanza
desde Teaching 1.0 hasta Teaching 5.0, basado en el marco conceptual
desarrollado por Wilbert Salgado. Cada etapa refleja transformaciones en la
epistemología, las prioridades pedagógicas y la relación docente–estudiante.
A partir de perspectivas como el positivismo, el constructivismo, el
conectivismo y el posthumanismo, el texto muestra cómo la educación ha pasado
de un modelo de transmisión de contenidos a una pedagogía ética, colaborativa
y mediada por la tecnología. El enfoque combina rigor académico con reflexión
personal para invitar al lector a cuestionar su propia práctica docente y el
papel de la tecnología y la empatía en el futuro de la educación. |
|
|
|
|
Resumo Este artigo examina a
evolução histórica, filosófica e tecnológica dos modelos de ensino, desde o
Teaching 1.0 até o Teaching 5.0, com base no marco conceitual desenvolvido
por Wilbert Salgado. Cada fase representa mudanças na epistemologia, nas
prioridades pedagógicas e na relação entre professor e aluno. Utilizando
perspectivas como positivismo, construtivismo, conectivismo e pós-humanismo,
o texto discute como a educação passou de uma instrução transmissiva para uma
pedagogia ética, colaborativa e integrada à tecnologia. O ensaio combina
análise acadêmica com reflexão pessoal, incentivando o leitor a situar sua
prática docente dentro desse continuum pedagógico. |
|
|
Education has always been a mirror of its time
and culture, reflecting the dominant philosophical and technological paradigms
that shape our human understanding and knowledge. Each epoch redefines the
teacher’s role, the learner’s agency, and the nature of knowledge itself. In Evolution
of Teaching Models (1.0–5.0), Wilbert Salgado outlines this historical and
epistemological transformation through five pedagogical eras. Each phase
embodies a unique negotiation between humans (being in this case teachers and
learners) and technology, between the quest for efficiency and the preservation
of meaning. The framework is not merely descriptive; it offers an ethical and
philosophical lens to understand how education evolves in response to its age
(current ways of thinking and technological development). By tracing this arc,
we can perceive how the act of teaching continually oscillates between
mechanism and meaning, control and creativity, hierarchy and co-learning.
The first stage, Teaching 1.0, based on
Wilbert Salgado’s analysis, captures the essence of the Industrial Paradigm,
deeply rooted in positivism and essentialism (Comenius, 1657/1907; Herbart,
1902). Knowledge was viewed as objective, universal, and externally verifiable.
The teacher stood as the authority, transmitter, and moral guide, while
students were expected to absorb information passively through imitation and
repetition. This educational model mirrored the needs of industrial society: order,
discipline, and productivity. While such instruction fostered uniformity
and moral stability, it often neglected individual growth and critical
reflection. The teacher’s voice dominated the classroom, and education became a
process of reproduction rather than transformation. In retrospect, this model
illustrates how early education systems sought to replicate social order
through obedience rather than to nurture intellectual independence.
The emergence of Teaching 2.0 during the
mid-twentieth century marked a profound epistemological shift. Inspired by the
cognitive revolution and constructivist theories, this era reconceived learning
as an active process of meaning-making (Dewey, 1938; Piaget, 1952; Vygotsky,
1978). The teacher’s authority gave way to facilitation; the classroom became a
space of inquiry, experimentation, and reflection. Students learned not by
absorbing facts but by connecting experiences. Dewey’s pragmatism redefined
education as life itself, a continuous process of growth through experience,
while Piaget and Vygotsky underscored the role of interaction and social
context in knowledge construction. Personally, Wilbert and I find in this model
the pedagogical DNA of contemporary learning: the dialogic process, the
emphasis on curiosity, and the recognition that knowledge is not received but
built. Teaching 2.0 invited educators to prioritize thinking over
memorization, inquiry over conformity, and the learner’s experience over the
teacher’s monotone monologues.
The transition to Teaching 3.0, the Digital
and Networked Era, further disrupted traditional pedagogies by introducing
technology as both medium and metaphor. Learning became decentralized and
networked, embodying the principles of connectivism (Siemens, 2005;
Downes, 2012). In this newer paradigm, knowledge exists not solely in the human
mind but across nodes of a digital network, within communities, devices, and
shared platforms. The teacher evolved from facilitator to designer of learning
experiences, curating content and crafting digital spaces for collaboration.
The classroom expanded beyond physical boundaries into a global and
asynchronous environment. With the arrival of multimedia and early learning
management systems, students became explorers of interconnected knowledge
rather than sole recipients of information. Yet, this abundance of access
brought new pedagogical challenges: discerning truth, managing information
overload, and maintaining human depth in virtual spaces. As educators Wilbert and
I have witnessed how Teaching 3.0 demands a dual literacy, technological
and critical, to balance participation with discernment.
Based on Wilbert’s analysis, Teaching 4.0
emerged in tandem with Industry 4.0, the age of automation, data, and
artificial intelligence. This model positions education as a platform for
creativity, adaptability, and lifelong learning (Anderson, 2010; Redecker,
2017). Teachers function as mentors and learning designers who cultivate
competencies that transcend disciplines (critical thinking, collaboration,
problem-solving, and ethical reasoning). Learning is personalized through
adaptive systems and gamified environments, and assessment emphasizes
performance and innovation rather than rote mastery. However, as automation
grows more sophisticated, this stage exposes an existential tension: the risk
of reducing human intelligence to data points. The question arises, are we
preparing adaptable workers or conscious citizens? To us, Teaching 4.0
exemplifies both promise and paradox: it democratizes access to knowledge but
risks commodifying learning itself. To sustain its humanistic integrity,
educators must intentionally pair technological fluency with emotional and
ethical literacy.
The culmination of this trajectory, Teaching
5.0, represents what Wilbert Salgado defines as the Human-Centric Era,
a reintegration of ethics, empathy, and sustainability into education. Rooted
in the philosophies of posthumanism and ethical constructivism (Haraway, 2016;
Braidotti, 2019), this model envisions human–AI collaboration not as
competition but as co-evolution. Teachers are no longer mere transmitters or
designers; they become co-learners and ethical guides who nurture
reflection, empathy, and global awareness. Students, in turn, become
responsible digital denizens capable of blending creativity with conscience and
ethics. This model invites a holistic pedagogy, one that incorporates
social-emotional learning (SEL), transdisciplinary inquiry, and sustainability
education (UNESCO, 2021). We personally see Teaching 5.0 as a moral and
spiritual reawakening within the technological age. It recognizes that the
ultimate purpose of education is not efficiency but humanity, to ensure that
technology amplifies compassion rather than alienates it.
The intellectual beauty of this pedagogical
evolution lies not in its linearity but in its recursive nature. Each stage
corrects and complements the excesses of the previous one: 1.0’s rigidity gives
rise to 2.0’s creativity; 3.0’s connectivity anticipates 4.0’s adaptability;
and 5.0’s ethical dimension restores the human equilibrium lost to automation.
This interplay reveals a profound truth: “Education is always an ethical
enterprise.” As teachers, we do not merely adopt new technologies; we embody new
philosophies of being and knowing. Each lesson, whether mediated by chalk or
algorithm, carries with it an implicit worldview, one that either humanizes or
mechanizes learning.
For both of us, Wilbert Salgado and Jonathan
Acuña, this framework is more than an academic taxonomy; it is a pedagogical
compass. It challenges educators to situate themselves within this evolutionary
continuum and ask, From which paradigm do I teach, and toward which paradigm
am I teaching? In our shared reflections, we have come to see that while
technological revolutions reshape educational practice, it is reflection that
reshapes its meaning. Teaching, in every iteration, remains a profoundly human
act, rooted in empathy, curiosity, and ethical imagination.
Ultimately, the Evolution of Teaching Models
(1.0–5.0) reminds us that progress in education is not measured by how
efficiently we transfer information, but by how deeply we cultivate
understanding. As we navigate the age of intelligent machines and immersive
realities, the challenge is not to keep pace with technology but to ensure that
learning keeps faith with humanity. Every new teaching model is a mirror, but
also a choice, a chance to reimagine what it means to teach and to be taught in
an age where both human and artificial intelligences coexist.
📚 References
Anderson,
C. (2010). The new industrial revolution: Makers, innovation, and the
reinvention of the world. Crown Business.
Braidotti,
R. (2019). Posthuman knowledge. Polity Press.
Comenius,
J. A. (1907). The great didactic of John Amos Comenius (M. W. Keatinge,
Trans.). Adam & Charles Black. (Original work published 1657)
Dewey, J.
(1938). Experience and education. Macmillan.
Downes, S.
(2012). Connectivism and connective knowledge: Essays on meaning and
learning networks. National Research Council of Canada.
Haraway,
D. (2016). Staying with the trouble: Making kin in the Chthulucene. Duke
University Press.
Herbart,
J. F. (1902). Outlines of educational doctrine (A. Lange, Trans.).
Macmillan.
Piaget, J.
(1952). The origins of intelligence in children (M. Cook, Trans.).
International Universities Press.
Redecker,
C. (2017). European framework for the digital competence of educators:
DigCompEdu. Publications Office of the European Union.
Siemens,
G. (2005). Connectivism: A learning theory for the digital age. International
Journal of Instructional Technology and Distance Learning, 2(1), 3–10.
UNESCO.
(2021). Reimagining our futures together: A new social contract for
education. UNESCO Publishing.
Vygotsky,
L. S. (1978). Mind in society: The development of higher psychological
processes. Harvard University Press.
Evolution of Teaching Models by Prof. Wilbert Salgado
Evolution of Teaching Models by Prof. Wilbert Salgado by Jonathan Acuña
Reader’s Handout Engaging with the Evolution of Teaching Models (1.0–5.0)
Reader’s Handout Engaging With the Evolution of Teaching Models (1.0–5.0) by Jonathan Acuña
Tracing the Evolution of Teaching Models (1.0–5.0) by Jonathan Acuña





