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Legocentric Speech: A Study of L. S. Vygotsky’s concept of inner speech

Legocentric Speech: A Study of L. S. Vygotsky’s concept of inner speech. Dimitri Carranza & Sylvia Whiteacre Child Growth and Development Spring 2009. Lev Semenovich Vygotsky. Born 1896 in Western Russia – Belorussia Law degree at Moscow University

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Legocentric Speech: A Study of L. S. Vygotsky’s concept of inner speech

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  1. Legocentric Speech: A Study of L. S. Vygotsky’s concept of inner speech Dimitri Carranza & Sylvia Whiteacre Child Growth and Development Spring 2009

  2. Lev Semenovich Vygotsky • Born 1896 in Western Russia – Belorussia • Law degree at Moscow University • No actual formal training in psychology • Collaborated with Alexander Luria and Alexei Leontiev • Died of tuberculosis 1934

  3. Child v. Chimp • Chimpanzee Age • ‘technical thinking’ or practical intelligence • Studies by Buhler, Shapiro and Gerkes, Guillaime and Meyerson • Guillaime and Meyerson • study of people with aphasia

  4. Speech Makes the Difference! • Freedom- mediative methods (indirect) • Decreases impulsive and spontaneous operations • Ape- series on incontrollable attempts • Child • Plans through speech • Carries out prepared solution through overt activity

  5. Speech Makes the Difference! • Controls child’s behavior • Able to become subject and object of their own behavior Masters situation with the help of speech, after mastering his behavior (Valsiner & Veer, p.109)

  6. Zone of Proximal Development • Three stages: Situation definition, intersubjectivity, semiotic mediation • Semiotic Mediation • Refers to the use of psychological sign (Psych tools---self) systems developed by the culture to foster communication and thinking (Dixon-Krauss, p.117).

  7. Internalization • The progressive transfer from external social activity mediated by signs to internal control (Dixon-Krauss, p.10) • Object-related, other-regulated, self-regulated • Example: Child learning the hand raising gesture as a sign for acquisition of information (Powell, 1993. p.10) • “First it appears between two people as an interpsychological category, and then within the child as an intrapsychological category” (Vygotsky 1981, p.163).

  8. EgocentricandInnerSpeech • Egocentric speech • The link between external social speech and internal thought (Dixon-Krauss, p.11) • Inner speech • Soundless speech • Thought connected with words and thinking in pure meanings (Vygotsky, Thought and Language, p.149).

  9. Piaget v. Vygotsky Vygotsky Piaget Most important source of cognitive development is the child Child acts independently and discovers what the world has to offer Universal cognitive change • Social environment helps child’s cognitive development • Human activity is a result of social learning • Highly variable development • Depends on cultural experience with the environment

  10. TheProblem • At what age will egocentric speech show dominant representation and when will it become internalized into Vygotsky’s notion of inner speech? • Will the results reflect Vygotsky’s theoretical age range when egocentric speech rises and declines?

  11. Hypothesis In comparing the use of egocentric speech among the children evaluated, we hypothesized that the closer the child is to ages 5-6, the greater the likelihood that egocentric speech will be evident and increase in accordance to Vygotsky’s theory.

  12. SettingofEvaluation • Children were interviewed in their homes • One child was interviewed at Sylvia’s house

  13. ResearchMethod • Homeschooled children ages 5-8 years old • Distributed a Lego kit with modified instructions to the child being tested. • Repeated the following: “Here is a set of Lego building blocks and a set of instructions to build a house. Carefully follow the instructions one page at a time. Completely finish one page before moving on to the next page. Try the best you can and good luck.”

  14. ResearchMethod • If the child requested help from the instructor, the reply was “Try the best you can to follow the instructions to make the house.” • The instructor helped the child finish the task (if necessary), and thanked the child.

  15. Lego Task • 16 Steps • A picture which adds on at each step • Step 6 appeared to be the critical point • Arrows

  16. Scoring of Data • Steps for Scoring: • Score the first fifteen minutes of each child. • Oral Speech relevant to task; oral speech not relevant to task; amount of speech in relation to task; speech direction • Add the first two boxes for the overall amount of speech during the task

  17. Scoring of Data Oral speech relevant to task: • What they say that is relevant to the task. 5 (High), 1 (Low). Oral speech not relevant to task: • Speech not at all relevant to the Legos task. 5 (High), 1 (Low).

  18. Scoring of Data Amount of speech in relation to task: • The number of the section (1-3) which included the most speech. Speech Direction: • A higher number means that a child is speaking more to themselves, a lower number means that the child is speaking more to me.

  19. Age 5 • Jake • Used much relevant oral speech • Ellie • Used little relevant oral speech

  20. Age 6 • Kyle • Continuous narration • Pretended the Lego Man was the builder • Veronica • Had to start over on step 6 • Joy • Irrelevant stories

  21. Age 7 • Mary Joy • Pointed out threat to validity • Noah • No sign of audible speech

  22. Age 8 • Addie • Signs of sibling rivalry • Isaac • Very confident

  23. Results

  24. Results • Younger children talked more • The first five minutes included the greatest amount of speech • Relevancy of speech to task did not seem to affect speech direction

  25. ThreatstoValidity • Problems with coloration on the instructions • Outside interference • Irregularities in administration • Subjective analysis of data • Maturation

  26. Conclusions • Our findings agreed with Vygotsky in that the younger children used more audible speech • Curvilinear trend • In general, the speech was more relevant than irrelevant • As the task advanced, less audible speech was used • Mastery of instructions

  27. Questions?

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