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3. Generation (social) constructivism: Cultural Historical Activity Theory: CHAT

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3. Generation (social) constructivism : . C ultural H istorical A ctivity T heory : CHAT. 3.Generations of socio-cultural theory. 1. generation Vygotsky 2. generation Leontjev & Luria ( Russian psychologists ) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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3. Generation (social) constructivism:

Cultural Historical Activity Theory:

CHAT

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3.Generations of socio-cultural theory

• 1. generation Vygotsky• 2. generation Leontjev & Luria ( Russian

psychologists)• 3. Vygotsky revisited – adapted to the US.

( though firmly embedded in the Sovjet society made fewer explicit references to marxism)

• M. Cole, LCHC, Y. Engeström, Jean Lave and others

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CHAT ”reinvents” Vygotsky

• The separation of intellect and affect as subjects of study was a major weakness of traditional psychology, since it made the thought process appear as an autonomous flow of ”thoughts” thinking themselves, segregated from the fullness of life , from the personal need and interests,the inclinations and impulses of the thinker”(p. 10)

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Why activity and practice theory ?

• An emphasis on the dialectical character of the fundamental relations constituting human experience ( determined and determining)

• A focus on experience in the world that rejects the structure and dynamics of psychological test procedures as a universally appropriate template.

• A shift in the boundaries of cognition and the environment such that cognition is stretched across mind , body, activity and setting = distributed cognition

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Increasing interest in CHAT(review of Educational Research 2007 77:186)

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Tensions in education and learning

• Epistemological:• Theory – praxis• Decontextualised and embodied knowledge• Individual and social learning• Problems of transfer

• CHAT offers the possibility to overcome some of these divides besides recovering more humane forms of education.

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Key Concepts in CHAT

• Context ( from container to rope (weaving))• Activity • Legitimate peripheral participation(Lave and

Wenger)• Practice• Artifacts and tools • Culture• Situated cognition, distributed cognition

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The meaning of context

• ” What is designated by the word ” situation” • is not a single object or event or set of objects and

events. For we never experience nor form judgments about objects and events in isolation, but only in connection with a contextual whole. This latter is called a situation.

• In actual experience there is never such isolated singular object or event, an object is always a special part, phase or aspect of an environing experienced world – a situation.

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Cognition,context & situation.

• Isolating what is cognized from life circumstances is obstructive to understanding cognition.

• isolation ( typical of experimental procedures in psychological studies of cognition) gives rise to the illusion that our knowledge of any object, be it ” an orange, a rock, a piece of bread or whatever” is knowledge of the object in isolation from the situation in which it is encountered.

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Ecology of human development ((Urie Bronfenbrenner 1979)

• Bronfenbrenner describes embedded systems starting with the microsystem at the core and proceeding outwards through mesosystems to the macrosystem. However

• While more inclusive levels of context may constrain lower levels, they do not cause them in a unilinear fashion.

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Meaning of context: ” that which surrounds”

leLearner, task, concept

lessonclassroom

School organisation

Community organisation

teacherteacher

principal

parents

School district country

International institutions

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CHAT:Context as that which weaves together.

• Context _ contextere(latin):” that which weaves together”.” Context might be compared to a rope. The fibres

that make up the rope are discontinuous, when you twist them together ,you don´t make them continuous, you make the tread continuous… even though it may look in a tread as though each of those praticles are going all through it, that isn´t the case. ”

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The meaning of context

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Context and tools

• The relevant order of context will depend crucially upon the tools through which one interacts with the world and these in turn depend upon one´s goals and other constraints in action.

• The combination of goals tools and setting constitutes the context of behavior and ways in which cognition can be said to relate to that context.

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Mediational triangle of cultural historical school

Subject Object

Artifact

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Artifact-mediated action

• Mediated action does not replace basic path (subj-obj).

• Culture does not replace biology.

• ”One does not cease to stand on the ground and look at the tree when one picks up an axe to chop the tree”

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Artifact –mediated action

• The incorporation of tools into the activity creates a new structural relation in which the cultural and natural routes operate synergistically.

• Through active attempt to appropriate their surroundings to their own goals, people incorporate auxilliary means (including other people) in to their actions, giving rise to the distinctive triadic relationship of subject-medium-object.

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Practice & Habitus

• The French sociologist/anthropologist Pierre Bourdieu(1977)uses the concept of habitus.

• Habitus is the product of the material conditions of existence and the set of principles for generating and structuring practices. Habitus constitutes the (usually )unexamined background set of assumptions about the world. Habitus is history made nature(p. 78).

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Practice & Habitus

• ” The habitus is the universalizing mediation which causes an individual agent´s practices without either explicit reason or signifying intent , to be none the less ” sensible” and ”reasonable”.(p. 79)

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Activity Theory ( Engeström)

• Engestrøm represents his conception of activity in a manner that both includes and enlarges upon the early cultural-historical psychologists notions of mediation as individual action.

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The Structure of a human activity System ( Engeström 1987)

Sense , meaning

Mediating artifacts:

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Yrje Engeström

• Professor of Adult Education and Director of the Center for Activity Theory and Developmental Work Research at University of Helsinki. ( Now CRADLE)

• Professor of Communication at University of California, San Diego, where he served as Director of the Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition from 1990 to 1995.

Works within the framework of cultural-historical activity theory.

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CRADLE• Welcome to the web pages of the Center for Research on Activity, Development and Learning – CRADLE. We

are a multidisciplinary research unit, focused on transformations and learning in collective activity systems and individuals facing new societal, cultural and technological challenges. Our work is inspired by cultural-historical activity theory and more broadly sociocultural approaches to human development. We are a community of researchers based at University of Helsinki.

• Our research is based on interplay between theory and practice. We work in close collaboration with various work organizations, educational institutions, and other communities of practice. Much of our research uses formative interventions, such as Change Laboratories. We are part of a growing international network of research groups which share a similar theoretical approach.

• In our Center, we have a good number of research projects as well as a doctoral program and a Master’s program. Feel free to contact our researchers and students. Your questions and suggestions are welcome. We will be happy to give you more information.

• Yrjö Engeström and Kai HakkarainenDirectors of CRADLE

• http://www.helsinki.fi/cradle/index.htm

• ContactEmail: yrjo.engestrom [at] helsinki.fi / Homepage >>Tel. +358 9 191 44574, fax +358 9 191 44579

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Michael Cole• Michael Cole, Professor, Ph.d.• Cole's work focuses on the elaboration of a mediational

theory of mind. He has conducted cross-cultural research on cognitive development, especially as it relates to the role of literacy and schooling. His recent research has been devoted to a longitudinal study of individual and organizational change within educational activities specially designed for afterschool hours. These systems link universities and local communities and allow a study of the dynamics of appropriation and use of new technologies and cultural-historical approaches to human development. [email protected]

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The Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition

• The Laboratory of Comparative Human Cognition was established at UCSD in 1978. As its name implies, members of LCHC pursue research which takes differences among human beings as a starting point for understanding human mental processes. They adopt an ecological approach to our subject matter, looking at systems that include mediating tools, people, representations, institutions and activities.

• Populations varying in age, culture, biological characteristics, social class, schooling, ethnicity, etc. are studied in a wide range of activity settings in various social institutions (schools, hospitals, workplaces) and countries.

• Correspondingly, we use a wide range of methods (such as participant observation, ethnography, experimentation, discourse-analysis) to bring in the role of culturally inflected collective social practices, change over time, and the cultural-historical context of the people among whom we work in the phenomena we study.

• http://lchc.ucsd.edu/

• http://lchc.ucsd.edu/mca/ ( Mind, Culture and Activity)

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Jette Steensen: [email protected] 26

Break

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Critique of schooling• ”The process of schooling seems to encourage the idea

that the ” game of School” is to learn symbolic rules of various kinds that there is not supposed to be much continuity between what one knows outside school and what one learns in school. There is growing evidence that not only may schooling not contribute in a direct qnd obvious way to performance outside school, but also that knowledge acquired outside school is not always used to support in-school learning. Schooling is coming to look increasingly isolated from the rest of what we do.(Resnick, 1987, p. 15)

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3 approaches to break the encapsulation of school learning

• Expanded learning as a didactical transformation of activity theory

• ” Ascending from the abstract to the concrete” (Davydov)

• ”Legitimate peripheral participation ( Jean Lave & Etienne Wenger)

• Learning by expanding (Yrje Engström)

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Davydov

• Davydov´s theory suggests that the encapsulation of school learning is due to an empiricist, descriptive and classificatory bias of traditional teaching and curriculum design.

• School knowledge becomes inert because its ”kernels” are never discovered by the students and they do not get a chance to deduce, explain and master practically concrete phenomena and problems in the environment.

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Davidov The method ascending from the abstract to the concrete, models

Eg. The phenomenon of the phases of the moon in the context of astronomical discoveryon

A theoreticalConcept related Astronomical phenomena

classroom Teachers teach and controlStudents study

Code of behaviorStandards of grading

The studentAnd the group

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Lave & Wenger criticizes Davydov.

• Davidov´s theory does not predicate qualitative changes in the rules, community and division of labour existing in traditional school learning.

• Davidov´s approach might be conceived close to a narrow cognitive and scientistic idea and consequently is criticized by Lave & wenger:

• ” there is no account of the place of learning in the broader context of the social world ”

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Legitimate peripheral participation Lave and Wenger

• ” There are strong goals for learning because learners as peripheral participants can develop in view of what the whole entreprise is about, and what there is to be learned. Learning itself is an improvised practice: a learning curriculum unfolds in opportunities for engagement in practice.”(Lave & Wenger 1991)

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Consequences for school learningLave and Wenger

• The logical solution would be to create good communities of practice within schools.

• The social organization of the school should be changed so that it would allow for communities of practical activity demonstrating Lave & wenger+s 3 main criteria:

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School learning ( Lave & Wenger)

• A. participants must have broad access to different parts of the activity and eventually proceed to full participation in core tasks.

• B.There should be abundant horizontal interaction between participants

• C Technologies and structures of the community of practice must be transparent, inner workings can become available for learner´s inspection.

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School learning (Lave and Wenger)

• The legitimate peripheral participation approach seems to propose to solve the problem of encapsulation of school learning by

• pushing communities of practice from the outside world into the school.

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Legitimate peripheral participation model

Technologies of transparency and simulation,stories, tools of established practice

Phases of the moon in the context of practical reproduction

Community of practice within the school

Code of behaviorStandards of skill

The student as a legitimate participant

37Tasks assigned according

To experience, proceeding from simple to more complex, from

parts to whole

mastery

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Expansive learning (y. Engeström)• The expansive learning approach would break the encapsulation of

school learning by a stepwise widening of the object and context of learning.

• The expanded object of learning consists of• the context of criticism,• the context of discovery,• and the context of application of the specific curricular contents under

scrutiny.• This kind of expansive transition is itself a process of learning through

self-organisation from below. The self-organisation manifests itself in the creation of networks of learning that transcend the institutional boundaries of the school and turn the school into a collective instrument.

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Learning by expanding

• Key questions:• Why not let the students themselves find out

how their misconceptions are manufactured in school ?

• Why is this being taught and studied in the first place ?

• Learners must have an opportunity to analyze critically and systematically their current activity and its inner cocntradictions.

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Critical analysis

• In a school setting , the critical analysis of current practice could well start with a hard look at textbooks and curricula in particular content areas.

• Secondly the learners must have an opportunity to design and implement in practice a way out, a new model for their activity. This means that the learners must work out a new way of doing school work

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Breaking the encapsulation of learning (Resnick)

• Davidov: create powerful intellectual tools in instruction that students can take into the outside world and grasp its complexities with the help of those tools.

• Lave & Wenger: create communities of practice within schools and participate in communities of practice outside school.

• Expansive learning: widen stepwise the object and context of learning. The expanded object of learning consists of the context of criticism, discovery and application

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Model of expansive learninglSchool as a collective instrument

Instruments of criticism + Lave and Davydov

astronomical phenomena iCriticism, discovery and application

Knowledge as socially constructed practice +Expanded structure of learning activity

Community network of learning

classroom

Complementary codes of criticism, discovery and application

Team of students , teachers practitioners + local people

Designed according to the specific object and context42

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Expanded learning (Engeström)

• The relationship between

• *the context of criticism,• opportunity to analyse current activity and inner contradictions (textbooks,

schooling etc)

• * the context of discovery • Davydovian process of finding,modeling and using a kernel abstraction to make sense of the

entire subject matter

• * the context of practical social application• Involvement in using and reproducing concepts in releant social practice inside and outside

school.

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Arguments for expansive learning• People must become ”good adaptive learners so they can perform

effectively when situations are unpredictable and tasks demand change”(resnick 1987,p.18)

• ”collectives of people must become good expansive learners, so they can design and implement their own futures as their prevalent practices show symptoms of crisis”(Engestrøm 2005,p.173)

• ” The expansive learning approach exploits the actually existing conflicts and dissatisfaction among teachers, students, parents and others involved in or affected by schooling and invites them to join in a concrete transformation of the current practice”(Engeström 2005, p. 173)

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Dilemmas• Informal – formal learning• Inside – outside school• Collaborative learning – individual learning• Behaviorism vs cognition• Direct instruction vs constructivism• Mentoring vs facilitating• Learnercentred – teacher centred• Individual vs society• Elite education vs mass education• Skills vs critical thinking

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• Bourdieu, P.(1977): Outline of a Theory of Practice. New York: Cambridge University press.

• Brown,J.S.,Collins,A., Duguid, P.(1989: Situated cognition and the culture of learning. Educational Researcher 18, 32 – 42.

• Dewey, J.(1938/1963) Experience and Education.New York. Macmillan.• Engeström, Y.(1987): Learning by expanding. Helsinki:Orienta-Sonsultit Oy.• Resnick,L.B.(1987) Learning in school and out. Educational Researcher 16(99,

13-20• Gardner, H.(1990) The difficulties of school: Probable causes, possible cures.

Daedalus 119(2), 85-113• Lave, J. and Wenger, E(1991)Situated learning. Legitimate peripheral

participation. Cambridge University Press.• Palincsar,A.S.(1989). Less chartered waters. Educational Researcher, 18(4), 5-7