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cep900 11.06.07

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The peculiar problems of preparing educational researchers. About Plagiarism. Citation Machine. remaining schedule. Nov 13: Graduate Life, Academic writing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: cep900 11.06.07


1
cep900 11.06.07
  • Remaining schedule
  • RDP requirements and general feedback
  • Proper citation plagiarism
  • Vygotsky introduction

2
readings
  • Becker, H. S. (1986). Freshman English for
    graduate students
  • Becker, H. S. (1986). Persona and authority. In
    Writing for social scientists.
  • Labaree, D. F. (2003). The peculiar problems of
    preparing educational researchers
  • About Plagiarism
  • Citation Machine

3
remaining schedule
  • Nov 13 Graduate Life, Academic writing
  • Nov 20 Prosem Fieldtrip Ann Arbor Hands-on
    Museum
  • Nov 27 RPD Presentations
  • Dec 4 RDP Presentations

4
Final RDP
  • Requirements
  • http//www.educ.msu.edu/DWongLibrary/CEP900f07/RDP
    Guidelines.html

5
Final RDP
  • General feedback from meetings

6
text
  • Csikzentmilhalyi talk Flow and learning
  • Erickson 252
  • Monday, 10 am

7
text
  • need advisors name (again)

8
The big idea
  • What we do and how we interact play a fundamental
    role in the development of cognition

9
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10
The context of vygotskys work
  • Vygotskys ideas can only be understood in their
    historical and ideological context
  • His theory was a direct reflection and response
    to the what was happening at that time
  • In fact, ALL ideas are best understood in the
    context from which they emerged

11
vygotsky resources
  • Vygotsky
  • http//www.marxists.org/archive/vygotsky/
  • http//tip.psychology.org/vygotsky.html
  • http//www.kolar.org/vygotsky/
  • Marxism
  • http//www.marxists.org/
  • Russian History
  • http//www.pbs.org/weta/faceofrussia/timeline-inde
    x.html
  • http//www.thehistorychannel.co.uk/classroom/aleve
    l/rus.htm

12
basis and superstructure of a society
  • Basis - the material, economic, and social
    relations in a society (natural conditions,
    technological means, and economic modes of
    production)
  • Superstructure - the way a society thinks, kinds
    of political institutions, laws, religions,
    morals, art, philosophy, and science
  • Superstructure emerges from basis

13
historical materialism
  • Mutual influence between society's culture
    (consciousness) and the bases of society
  • Examples?

14
historical materialism
  • Examples?
  • Modern industrial age emphasis on efficiency,
    accuracy, power
  • Capitalism emphasis on accumulation,
    individualism, private ownership
  • Other modes of economic modes and consciousness
    tribal, feudal, communism

15
dialectic a process of development
  • Dialectic between Man and Nature. In altering
    Nature, we also transform our consciousness.
  • Activity is not uni- directional, either we
    acting on the world or the world acting upon us.
    In some sense, it is not even both. The
    activity, the dialectic, is an indivisible unity
  • An implication One creates oneself through work.
    Work is positive and essential. Though work,
    you exist - your life belongs to you.

16
marx's critique of capitalism
  • In capitalist system, labor does not belong to
    the worker. Consider Russia and England at the
    time (late 1800s)
  • The worker becomes alienated from his work and,
    thus, from himself. Your work, and thus you,
    belong to someone else.
  • Profits (part of the laborer) go to enriching the
    lives of the capitalist. The workers lives are
    exploited, literally taken away.
  • A capitalist basis of society separates labor
    (activity that produces the capital or
    necessities) from capital (means to get
    necessities)

17
From this context, emerges Vygotskys ideas
  • Vygotskys psychological theory
  • Highlights the relationship between
    consciousness, activity, and tools
  • Emphasizes the fundamentally social and
    collective nature of knowledge and consciousness
  • The most powerful tool of all belongs to the
    group (language), not a small elite. People can
    be their own masters.

18
vygotsky's big ideas
  • Child-in-activity-in-context as unit of study
  • Zone of proximal development
  • Socio-cultural origins of mental functioning
  • Mediation of intellectual functioning by tools
    provided by culture

19
child-in-activity-in-context
  • One cannot understand learning at all without
    considering the child-activity-context. They are
    not simply interacting, but form an indivisible
    unity
  • In research, the unit of analysis cannot be the
    child(ren), but must be child(ren)-activity-contex
    t.

20
example
  • A child works on a blocks puzzle - with his
    mother - in a research study.
  • What can you say about the child, without regard
    to the task or context? What can you say about
    the task, without regard to the child or context?
  • Another example What can you say about a student
    who misbehaves in school, without regard to
    history and context?

21
interpsychological and intrapsychological
  • Every function in the child's cultural
    development appears twice first, on the social
    level, and later on the individual level first,
    between people (interpsychological), and then
    inside the child (intrapsychological). This
    applies equally to voluntary attention, to
    logical memory, and to the formulation of
    concepts. All the higher functions originate as
    actual relations between human individuals
    (Vygotsky, 197857)

22
interpsychological and intrapsychological
  • Young infants give very little indication that
    they are trying to communicate when they yell. It
    seems likely they are just distressed. But we
    adults-as-parents worry about what it is they are
    crying about, and do something in an effort to
    help them. We treat their yells as a cry for
    help we treat them as if they were communicating
    with us.This is an example of what Vygotsky means
    by an intermental ability the ability the infant
    has to communicate his or her state cannot be
    located within the infant, but only in the
    relationship between the infant and the other
    person who acts so as to constitute yelling as a
    means of communication.
  • When the infant has figured out that this is the
    functional status of yelling, and can use it in
    order to get someone to do something, then we are
    talking about an intramental ability.

23
interpsychological and intrapsychological
  • Development is not learning to do something new,
    but taking over the control of something you can
    already do in concert with somebody else.

24
zone of proximal development
  • the distance between the actual developmental
    level as determined by independent problem
    solving and the level of potential development as
    determined through problem solving under adult
    guidance or in collaboration with more capable
    peers (Vygotsky, 1978 86)

25
zpd implications
  • Intelligence is what one can be with the help of
    others. Emphasizes potential, possibility, how
    present and future are linked
  • Intelligence is neither an individual nor a
    static quality
  • Highlights Vygotsky's view of the fundamentally
    social nature of human activity

26
zpd implications
  • What are other views of intelligence and their
    theoretical and historical origins?
  • In learning, there is a mutual influence between
    the learner and more knowledgeable other
  • Gives rise to the ideas of
  • learning as apprenticeship, and legitimate
    peripheral participation (Lave Wenger)
  • The importance of scaffolding by others
  • Learning (the ability to do things) precedes,
    rather than follows, mental development
    (consciousness, internalization)

27
Socio-cultural origins of mental functioning
  • Vygotsky was fascinated by the power of language
    (background in literature)
  • Higher mental functions appear twice in
    development between people (intermental) and
    within the child (intramental)
  • An emphasis on language highlights
  • (a) the fundamentally social nature of knowledge
    and thought, and learning
  • (b) how knowledge is never really the sole
    possession of the individual. It belongs to the
    collective.

28
mediation of thought by cultural tools
  • Mediate to be between two sides, to be part of
    both sides, to be part of the whole process
  • Without mediation, something is im-mediate,
    taking place directly
  • Experience and thought are not directly connected
    to each other.

29
mediation of thought by cultural tools
  • "Humans master themselves from the outside
    through psychological tools"
  • Recall the Marxist idea that in a given period,
    the tools (means of economic production)
    determines cultures consciousness (working
    conditions, cognition, beliefs, values,
    perception of reality, etc.)

30
mediation of thought by cultural tools
  • Psychological toolsdirected inward
  • Technical tools directed outward
  • Examples of psychological tools?
  • Why are these tools cultural

31
psychological tools examples
  • Language
  • Writing
  • Counting systems
  • Charts, maps
  • In what ways do these tools fundamentally shape
    (not just influence) our consciousness?

32
language the tool of tools
  • Why is language considered the tool of tools?
  • Affords greater freedom of action than just tool
    use of animals
  • Action becomes less impulsive, more planful
  • Children become both the subject and objects of
    their own behavior, their own masters
  • Language empowers the helpless it is a tool
    under the control of the user

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