| 英文摘要 |
Grounded in David Kolb’s experiential learning theory and enriched by Dewey’s educational pragmatism and von Glasersfeld’s radical constructivism, this study critically examines the epistemological and pedagogical transformations brought about by generative AI tools in learning-by-doing practices. The research identifies that generative AI has evolved from a mere supportive tool to a quasi-subject in the learning process, altering the ontological structure of experience and knowledge formation. The intervention of AI reconfigures Kolb’s learning cycleespecially reflective observation and abstract conceptualizationinto a recursive and distributed cognitive system, thus challenging traditional conceptions of learning subjectivity and knowledge ownership. This paper further analyzes the implications of AI-augmented co-construction in knowledge practices, emphasizing the emergence of dynamic subjectivity and cognitive hybridity. In response to current AI literacy frameworks, the study critiques dominant policies for prioritizing technical skills over reflective inquiry and co-learning practices. It concludes by proposing three core pillars for educational design in the AI era: preserving learner subjectivity, optimizing AI adaptability for personalized learning, and ensuring effective, transferable knowledge construction through recursive experiential cycles. |