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SOCIOCULTURAL MODELS OF LITERACY

SOCIOCULTURAL MODELS OF LITERACY. LEV VYGOTSKY (1896-1934). The mind emerges in interactions with others. Formation of concepts and memory appear first between people (the social level) and second inside the child (the individual level. ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT.

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SOCIOCULTURAL MODELS OF LITERACY

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  1. SOCIOCULTURAL MODELS OF LITERACY

  2. LEV VYGOTSKY (1896-1934) • The mind emerges in interactions with others. • Formation of concepts and memory appear first between people (the social level) and second inside the child (the individual level.

  3. ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT • Role played by “more knowledgeable others.” • The distance between the actual level as determined by independent problem solving and the level of potential development if guided by an adult or by collaboration with more knowledgeable peers. • Instruction should not follow development; it should lead development. • “What a child can do with assistance today; she can do by herself tomorrow.”

  4. LANGUAGE: THE FOCAL PSYCHOLOGICAL TOOL • First order: The individuals’ ability to speak and understand oral language • Second order: an individual’s understanding of written language • Competence in using written language has the potential to enhance cognitive abilities.

  5. CULTURAL HISTORY • Reading is not a natural act • Cultural variability has the potential to transform comprehension • Nature of the alphabet • Reading silently • Role of computer-based text

  6. MICHAEL HALLIDAY • The distinctive characteristic of human learning is making meaning. • Language is the essential condition of knowing. • Grammatical structure of oral and written language contributes to the creation and communication of meaning

  7. JAMES PAUL GEE • Primary Discourse: Refers to unique ways of making and communicating meaning (both verbal and non-verbal) as part of upbringing. • Secondary Discouse: enables us to communicate and be part of different groups. • Reading is situated not general, that is, individuals must learn ( and be taught) to read texts in different ways for different purposes

  8. DEFINING COMPREHENSION • Comprehension does not involve central cognitive structures. • Comprehension is culturally variable and historically changing. • The ability to read the word is tied to our ability to read the world.

  9. CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION • Reading is more than transferring information in the text to the mind of the reader. • Reading is a social practice; readers engage in culturally defined ways of reading and using the text. • Reading is influenced by the conditions in which reading occurs.

  10. CLASSROOM INSTRUCTION • Students must learn collaboratively. • Teacher scaffolding is important. • Language is the “tool of all tools” • Students must be conversant with school discourse (all content areas) if they are to be successful

  11. LOUISE ROSENBLATT • All language is a transaction with the environment. • Oral language (conversation): Linguistic history of participants; contributions of speakers; facial tone; gestures; expression; beliefs; state of mind; attitudes; questions; clarifying comments; etc. • Reading: missing physical presence; meaning is cultural and based on readers’ personal and life experiences

  12. READING IS A TRANSACTION • Between a reader and a pattern of signs (text). • Meaning is not in the reader or the text • Meaning comes into being during the transaction. Physical, personal, social, and cultural factors influence what is paid attention to and what is synthesized into meaning. • Reading is a “choosing activity.”

  13. READER STANCE • Readers adopt a “stance” to guide choosing. • Efferent: Attention to what is to be extracted or retained • Aesthetic: Attention to what is being lived: feeling. Sensations, ideas, rhythm of words, etc.

  14. CLASSROOM LANGUAGE AND LITERACY LEARNING • Communicative competence in school: knowing about the structure and use of everyday language as well as the functions of language in the classroom. • Classroom communication makes unique demands on students. • Students differ in communicative competence, in using language appropriately and effectively in the classroom.

  15. COMMUNICATIVE DEMANDS OF A CLASSROOM • Knowing the “rules of the game.” • Engaging in active participation • High-print homes involve language interactions similar to classroom interactions such as information exchange. • Some children lack experience with: various literary forms and functions; question and answer exchanges, receiving teacher evaluation of discourse

  16. SCAFFOLDS FOR LEARNING • Scaffold: An external structure that braces another structure being built. • Teachers primarily provide scaffolding through dialogue: classroom discussions and “grand conversations.” • Two types of scaffold: Directive and supportive.

  17. DIRECTIVE SCAFFOLD • Most prevalent • Predominance of teacher control and predetermined standards for acceptable participation • IRE: Initiation-Response- Evaluation • Based on assumption that the teacher’s primary function is transmitting and assessing knowledge.

  18. SUPPORTIVE SCAFFOLDS • Instructionally practices are grounded in culturally meaningful experiences. • Learning occurs in collaboration with teachers and peers. • Basic form of teaching is dialogue through instructional conversations.

  19. SCAFFOLDING SEQUENCES • Explicit modeling • Direct explanations and re-explanations • Invitations to participate in the conversation • Verifying and clarifying student understanding

  20. STUDENT ENGAGEMENT • Elementary classrooms that invite collaboration engage students. • Social interaction engages elementary students: encourage students to listen closely to each other, entertain multiple interpretations of test and recognize alternative interpretations. • High school students prefer small group work and learned more from open-ended tasks. • Discussion of expository text can develop learning strategies.

  21. PEER LEARNING • Cooperative groups • Conversational discussion groups • Questioning the author • Semantic mapping

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