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SOCIOCULTURAL THEORY OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

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Born in Gomel, Belarus a few 100 miles from the Polish Border to middle ... into Vygotsky, Marxist politics was rampant and the Bolsheviks controlled Russia. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOCIOCULTURAL THEORY OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT


1
SOCIO-CULTURAL THEORY OF COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
  • LEV VYGOTSKY (1896 - 1934)

2
BACKGROUND
  • Born in Gomel, Belarus a few 100 miles from the
    Polish Border to middle class Jewish parents
  • Tutored at home by a progressive tutor who used
    advanced teaching techniques
  • Greatly affected by the Russian politics of the
    time.
  • The Czarist Government subjected the Jews to
    periodic pogroms which his family survived.

3
YOUNG ADULTHOOD POLITICS
  • Admitted to University of Moscow despite the 3
    quota system where he studied law.
  • When he graduated in 1917 Vygodsky had turned
    into Vygotsky, Marxist politics was rampant and
    the Bolsheviks controlled Russia.
  • Lev returned home to his hometown to teach in
    what was at this point a state school.
  • 1920 he contracted tuberculosis, and this
    affected the rest of his short life.

4
POLITICS PSYCHOLOGY
  • 1924 the year Stalin took power after Lenins
    death, Vygotsky fell in Love married and moved to
    Moscow.
  • In the upheaval of the revolution life conditions
    were miserable lived in 1 room with family.
  • Travelled back and forth from Moscow, Leningrad
    and Kharkow with teaching and publishing jobs.
  • Founded the Institute of Defectology, where he
    directed the department of education for
    physically defective and mentally retarded
    children.

5
POLITICS PSYCHOLOGY
  • Gathered together a large group of young
    scientists interested in Defectology, mental
    abnormality and psychology.
  • His ideas gained power and influence in Russia
    and his students became some of the paragons of
    Soviet Psychology.
  • Within the decade he became the leader of Soviet
    Psychology championing a New Science.
  • This Science was radically different to existing
    ideas of the nature of Psychology.

6
A NEW SCIENCE OF PSYCHOLOGY
  • Both Soviet and American psychology presumed
    psychology to be a Science of Behaviour.
  • Secondly American Psychology reflected its
    national history of rugged individualism.
  • Vygotsky railed against both these traditions, as
    seen with many great psychologists his personal
    experiences exerted an identifiable influence on
    theory.

7
A MARXIST PSYCHOLOGY
  • Vygotsky and his followers re-invented Soviet
    psychology.
  • They studied education, illiteracy, remediation
    and cultural differences among hundreds of ethnic
    groups comprising of the new nation.
  • As a Marxist Psychologist his agenda was to
    understand how individuals incorporate the social
    (collective) consciousness into their own
    activities.
  • He died in 1934, his short professional life was
    very productive and he left behind several books,
    many articles and drawers full of unpublished
    books manuscripts.

8
FRAMEWORK FOR THEORY
  • Vygotsky's works were suppressed after his death,
    e.g. Thought and Language, was unpublished in the
    West until 1962. Consequently, the impact of his
    ideas is only beginning to be felt in Western
    psychology.
  • For Vygotsky, mental processes can only be
    understood by looking at what they develop from
    and what they develop into. Of particular
    importance was the role of interpersonal (social)
    interaction.

9
VYGOTSKIAN ASSUMPTIONS
  • First, that children are born with fundamental
    cognitive and perceptual abilities, including
    capacity for memory and attention.
  • Second that an infant is an active agent in its
    quest for understanding an knowledge.
  • Third, that the characteristics of human nature
    was tied up in the collective structure as both
    product and servant.

10
THEMES IN THEORY
  • Wertsch (1985) has identified three main themes
    in Vygotsky's theory(i) reliance on a genetic
    method(ii) the social origin of the higher
    mental functions(iii) the principle of semiotic
    mediation.

11
GENETIC METHOD
  • Vygotsky's assumption was that human mental
    functioning can only be understood in terms of
    its development from more primitive forms.
  • Distinction between the elementary mental
    functions (EMF) and the higher mental functions
    (HMF). Specific to each type of mental function
    is a particular line of development.

12
ELEMENTARY HIGHER MENTAL FUNCTIONS
  • The EMFs develop along the natural line of
    development (sometimes referred to as the
    biological line), e.g. natural (non-mediated)
    memory, non-voluntary attention, etc.
  • The HMFs develop along the cultural line of
    development (sometimes referred to as the
    social/historical line), e.g. mediated memory,
    voluntary attention, problem-solving, etc.
    Example of EMF/HMF distinction

13
FEATURES OF EMF HMF
  • Elementary mental functions
  • Environmentally determined
  • Inaccessible to consciousness
  • Development determined by interaction with
    physical environment
  • Non-mediated
  • Higher mental functions
  • Individually determined
  • Accessible to consciousness
  • Development determined by interpersonal
    interaction
  • Mediated by culturally derived sign systems

14
4 GENETIC DOMAINS
  • Phylogenetic
  • sociocultural history
  • ontogenetic
  • microgenetic.

15
SOCIAL ORIGIN
  • Vygotsky's main claim about the HMF was that they
    emerge in context of interpersonal interaction.
    This gave rise to his general genetic law of
    cultural developmentAny function in the
    child's cultural development appears twice, or on
    two planes. First it appears on the social plane,
    and then on the psychological plane. First it
    appears between people as an inter-psychological
    category, and then within the child as an
    intra-psychological category... Social relations
    or relations among people genetically underlie
    all higher functions and their relationships.
    (1981, p. 163)

16
SEMIOTIC MEDIATION
  • Mediation of thought processes by words and other
    culturally derived signs can be seen as an
    example of a characteristic carried over from the
    inter-psychological to the intra-psychological
    plane.
  • Our social interactions are mediated by words
    Vygotsky makes the same claim about our socially
    derived thought processes.

17
SEMANTICS
  • For Vygotsky, signs fulfil the role of
    psychological tool. A crucial feature of the HMF
    is 'the creation and use of artificial stimuli
    which become the immediate causes of behaviour'
    (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 39).
  • Instead of mental activity being entirely driven
    by environmental stimuli (EMF), it is mediated by
    artificial, conventional signs such as words in
    natural language. Certainly, the idea of thinking
    as a 'conversation in the head' has great appeal

18
NEO-VYGOTSKY
  • The psychologist with most responsibility for the
    recent upsurge of interest in Vygotsky's ideas is
    Wertsch (1985, 1991). Recent developments in
    linguistics and semiotics have highlighted many
    of Vygotsky's claims as standing in need of
    revision.

19
DEVELOPMENTS OF SCT 1
  • We now know much more about how children acquire
    language, particularly how individuals might
    grasp important grammatical categories before
    they understand the words themselves (Bruner,
    1975).

20
DEVELOPMENTS OF SCT 2
  • Theoretical advances have improved our
    understanding of how inner speech derives from
    private speech.

21
DEVELOPMENTS OF SCT 3
  • The notion of the psychological tool has been
    modified to that of the 'toolkit' (Wertsch,
    1991), allowing us to understand how different
    contexts elicit usage of a range of mediational
    devices. This is particularly interesting in
    light of recent demonstrations of
    context-sensitivity in demonstrations of
    intellectual ability (e.g. Donaldson, 1978
    Light, 1988).

22
DEVELOPMENTS OF SCT 4
  • The theory of cultural learning (Tomasello et
    al., 1993) has provided an exciting illustration
    of how a Vygotskian 'sociocultural' approach can
    make sense of much of the recent evidence on
    normal and abnormal development.

23
SCAFFOLDING
  • The concept of scaffolding is a way of thinking
    about social relationships involved in learning
    from another person.
  • A scaffold is a temporary structure that gives
    the necessary support to accomplish a task.

24
SCAFFOLDING CONTD.
  • An effective Caregiver- teacher will provide such
    a structure in a learning/ problem solving
    situation.
  • Ex Learning Outcomes, explaining end result,
    bigger picture

25
THE ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT
  • The span or disparity between what children are
    able to do without assistance of others, and what
    they are often able to accomplish by having
    someone more expert assist them at key points.
  • Vygotsky claimed the most affective assistance
    from the teacher was when it was over estimating
    student.

26
GUIDED PARTICIPATION
  • In all communities adults provide a scaffolding
    for children to begin engaging in mature
    activities.Ex going to shops, church, cooking
    looking after younger children etc.

27
CULTURAL GAP IN GUIDED PARTICIPATION
  • SOCIETIES OF ROUTINE ADULT CHILD COMPANY
    supportive of observations and less
    instructional, children took more responsibility
    for attention and interest
  • SOCIETIES OF NON-ROUTINE ADULT CHILD COMPANY
    children took LESS responsibility for attention
    and interest. Needs more directed instructional
    lessons.

28
INTERSUBJECTIVITY
  • The mutual attention and shared communication
    between expert student.

29
QUESTIONS TO ANSWER
  • How does the socio-cultural approach differ from
    'maturation' and 'processing speed' accounts of
    development?
  • How does the socio-cultural approach require a
    rethinking of the notion of the 'individual' in
    development?
  • How are Vygotskys three themes illustrated by
    the ZPD?
  • What implications does the ZPD have for parenting
    and education?
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