Title: Literacy Theory, the Young Child and
1Literacy Theory, the Young Child and
Incommensurable Understandings.
- Dory Lightfoot
- University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC)
2What do I mean by incommensurate?
- As Bhabha (1994) points out, policies are a type
of cultural artifact that represent the truths
of part but not all of a community. - How do strategies of representation come to be
formulated in the competing claims of communities
where the exchange of values, meanings, and
priorities may not be collaborative and
dialogical, but may be profoundly antagonistic,
conflictual and even incommensurable?(Bhabha,
1994, 2)
3Why this paper?
- This paper looks at the use of scientific
discourse to create the universal child. - Science, alone, is insufficient to make
educational decisions. - Metaphorical analysis shows that competing
educational methodologies reflect conflicting
values and moral beliefs. These beliefs are
culturally and historically specific. - Best practice decisions based on scientific
studies can paper over incommensurate educational
values but cannot make them disappear.
4The Young Child as Universal Learner
- Much current educational research works on the
assumption that science can identify cognitive
universals in young children and identify
neutral, value-free best practices for
providing education for all. - In this paper, literacy theory in the United
States shows how the apparently neutral
language of science hides deep cultural
differences in values and understandings of young
children. - The language of scientific neutrality obscures
but does not resolve incommensurable (Bhabha,
1994)differences. - The use of science to set up one understanding of
the young child always has power implications.
Science sets up and enforces a particular regime
of truth.
5Why is this the language of science problematic?
- Universalizing terms such as children subsume
all children into knowable and calculable
category. - These terms lead us to ignore culturally
constructed elements of understandings of young
children and their relationships with adults. - A look at different metaphors concerning parents
and children in the U.S. give us an example of
how problematic such universalizing assumptions
are.This exemplifies a turn to universals taking
place globally.
6Two theoretical underpinnings to discussion
- Poststructuralist/postcolonial theory-- knowledge
is power. - Theory of metaphor-- here emphasizing Lakoff and
Johnsons (1980)idea of conceptual metaphors
linking together wide, and superficially
unrelated areas of experience through a shared,
underlying metaphor.
7Foucault, (1980) Truth and Power.
- Truth produces regular effects of power. Each
society has its régime of truth its 'general
politics" of truth that is the types of
discourse which it accepts and makes function as
true the mechanisms and instances which enable
one to distinguish true and false statements, the
means by which each is sanctioned the techniques
and procedures accorded value in the acquisition
of truth the status of those charged with saying
what counts as true. (131) - Metaphors allowing us to understand and calculate
the young child are particular regimes of
truth.
8Lakoff and Johnson (1980) Conceptual Metaphors
- A conceptual metaphor is a conventional way of
conceptualizing one domain of experience in terms
of another. (Lakoff, 1996, 4-5) - People conceptualize a great many things in terms
of metaphor-- morality among them. (Lakoff, 1996,
374)
9Lakoffs two metaphors of family.
- In U.S. culture there are two strong competing
metaphors of the good family. - These metaphors extend beyond the home to
influence our understandings of good and
appropriate social institutions, and have
strong moral overtones. - Contrasting family metaphors provide an example
of how social/cultural understandings of
education are shaped by factors that lie
outside of science.
10Metaphor 1 Nurturant family.
- The primal experience is one of being cared for
and cared about, having ones desires for loving
interactions met, living as happily as possible,
and deriving meaning from mutual interaction and
care. (Lakoff, 1996, 108) - Nurturant families de-emphasize top-down
authority relations. They are characterized by
shared decision making, parental modeling of
moral values, and child-centered family discourse
patterns. - Encouraging children to figure out important
concepts on their own with adult support is
caring and promotes intellectual and moral
development.
11Metaphor 2Strict father model.
- The model is a traditional nuclear family, with
the father having primary responsibility for
supporting and protecting the family as well as
the authority to set overall family policy. He
teaches children right from wrong by setting
strict rules and enforcing them through
punishment. (Lakoff, 1996, 66) - In strict father families strong authority
relations, and explicit rules enforced by
sanctions and punishment are caring, and
promote development and correct behavior in young
children. - Family discourse is adult-centered.
- Leaving children to figure out important topics
on their own is uncaring and leads to poor
behavior.
12Literacy methods as family models.
- Our understandings of the young child learning to
read have strong ties to metaphors of the family. - Whole language instruction has elements of the
nurturant family model. It seems naturally
good and appropriate to people using this
metaphor to understand the young child. - Phonics instruction has many elements of the
strict father metaphor.
13Literacy methods seen through textual analysis.
- This presentation gives a brief look at how
metaphorical understandings run through texts and
reflect values not measurable by scientific
comparisons of methods. - The samples are from apparently non-political,
scientific discourse, drawn from a handbook of
literacy research.
14Text 1 Nurturant family understandings in
scientific text.
- I am not focusing on written language as a code
but as a symbolic tool that mediates human
experience and interaction.(126)Childrens words
are always used words they are part of the
dynamics of society Like all learners, children
must use familiar frames of reference to
recontextualize salient aspects of new activities
(new concepts, new symbolic tools and new social
practices). This allows children a sense of
competence and agency In a dialectic fashion,
children also recontextualize aspects of their
worlds within the frameworks of new activities
and thus potentially gain new reflective angles
on experiences. (134) (Dyson, 2002)
15First text Subtle metaphorical links to
nurturant family metaphor.
- Children participating in communicative
events-- engaging in conversation with adults as
part of learning process. - Literacy learning as means of children gaining
agency and competence. - Children learn actively-- structuring their own
recontextualization.
16Phonics advocates write about learning
- I describe the development of childrens
abilities to recognize and categorize different
phonological units in spoken words I argue that
we need to understand more about the relative
weight that needs to be given to the different
phonological units of syllable, rhyme and phoneme
(111) 60 children who had performed poorly
were trained in grouping words in terms of
sound... At the end of the second year children
in the experimental group were 8 months further
in reading than the semantic control group, and a
year further in spelling. (122). (Goswami, 2002)
17Second text has elements of strict father
metaphor.
- Reading consists of acquiring a set of specific
skills (e.g. phonological units) as determined
by adults. - No mention of childrens input into learning
process.No dialogue. - Skill recognition process referred to as
training in recognition of adult-centered
discourse process in classroom.
18Question How can incommensurate educational
understandings be settled using science alone?
- Scientific discourse avoids moral issues and
value discussions/conflicts in search of
neutrality. - Science is reductionstic and seeks to find most
economical possible solution that fits all
situations. - Scientific discourse inclines us to look for
universal models of learning and teaching. - Science cannot be eliminated from decisions about
policy or methodology, but it cannot be the only
voice.
19Conclusions Can educators find a language that
recognizes different cultural understandings of
the young child?.
- Education is about culturally and historically
contingent values-- not just best practice. - Metaphorically laden values have strong overtones
of moral rightness/wrongness and cannot be easily
overturned by a new set scientific studies or
policy decisions. - We need to highlight different metaphorical
values in order to understand them. - Policy decisions are negotiations between parties
with different and even incommensurate values--
not just searches for a universal, scientifically
proven solution. - Scientificallydriven best practice models
will always be more acceptable to some groups in
society than others, as they are consonant with
the understandings of some groups and not others.
20For comments, or for a paper, write to Dory
Lightfoot at doryl_at_uic.edu University of
Illinois at Chicago (UIC)