[Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
lpscholar2@gmail.com
lpscholar2@gmail.com
Sun Dec 4 12:01:07 PST 2016
Mike,
Working from memory and hea say the model of community nursing care in Finland (I think) is an alternative that may be possible.
In a single local community the 12 health care nurses decided to organize themselves in a learning collaborative with no hierarchical structure.
A core principal was that each patient was asigned to only two nurses, one of whom would visit them in their homes. Is one nurse was absent the other was available.
>From this model, slowly other local communities of health care nurses chose to organize in this fashion or style.
Now, approximately 70 percent of the health care community hubs follow this model without hierarchy. The leadership comes from within each pod of 12 nurses.
Each pod can post how they have implemented a change and the other pods are invited to seminars (if interest is generated). No pod is required to make the changes modeled but if persuaded by example (exemplar) they have the autonomy to also make a similar change.
What is significant is how this non-heirarchical model (with the intermental as a core organizing principle) spread to become the dominant (normal, taken for granted) model of community public health care community outreach and was elected by each community care team of 12 nurses.
I think it was Finland, but am quite sure it was a Scandinavian country. Obviously, the government trusted and funded this alternative model of service delivery.
Others may know more.
Bernie Saunders was pushing for opening local public community health hubs and could if elected have acknowledged this experiment in non-hierarchical organization.
Could there be lessons to learn for creating non-hierarchical local school hubs.
Seems an impossible dream, however the stuff of dreams is the source of ..
Objective reality
Sent from my Windows 10 phone
From: mike cole
Sent: December 4, 2016 11:17 AM
To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
Hi Molly --
The messages have comes frequently and complexly I missed a real response to
your call to examine the positive models provided by Megan that stretched
from classroom to community groups and look for all the world like great
science education. A positive alternative.
Phillip mentioned a school he work for 15 years that appeared, from the
brief description, to embody the kinds of principles being invoked here as
an alternative to the neo-liberal model of education-as-commodity. I am
wondering, Phillip, if there is any description of the conditions that made
the creation of an alternative educational practice in a
command-and-control political economy possible? What conditions sustained
them?
I would add the Salt Lake City school written about by Barbara Rogoff and
colleagues as an institutionalized alternative.
I also think the lines of research that Carrie (I believe) referred to as
models are important but I am always curious about the infrastructure that
enables those models to happen in in the first place and the process of
repair/renewal/keeping on keeping on. This is the line that my colleagues
and followed in the FifthDimension and subsequent projects. Here there
appear to be a number of candidates.
I guess this is a question about the social ecology of an alternative form
of education that embodies the values that go along with a
socio-cultural-historical-activity sort a theory. This interest goes along
with Phillip's earlier comment
as Smagorinsky pointed out in his paper regarding development of learning and
soocial practices, at core there is always an ideology.
here in the states it is neoliberal capitalism.
in russia it was communism, and now Putinism.
both carry a high value of conformity, nationalism, and compliance to authority.
So the question becomes, i think, is how are we to understand local
sociocultural ecologies that permit us to carry out the kind of education
we think maximizes the kind of values that organize our image of our
children's future worlds.
Galina faced that problem under soviet rule and under oligarchic
capitalism, we face it under Trumpism. The folks in Singapore live it.
In short: Under what conditions is it possible to institutionalize
alternatives?
mike
(Apologies for font messups)
On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 4:15 PM, Edward Wall <ewall@umich.edu> wrote:
> Molly
>
> This does look like an excellent book. I was just looking at her
> article and missed this.
>
> Many thanks!!
>
> Ed
>
> > On Dec 2, 2016, at 6:11 PM, molly shea <mvshea@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > Hi Ed,
> >
> > Megan Bang and Doug Medin wrote an excellent book on Science Education:
> > https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/whos-asking
> >
> > *Overview*
> > The answers to scientific questions depend on who’s asking, because the
> > questions asked and the answers sought reflect the cultural values and
> > orientations of the questioner. These values and orientations are most
> > often those of Western science. In Who’s Asking?, Douglas Medin and Megan
> > Bang argue that despite the widely held view that science is objective,
> > value-neutral, and acultural, scientists do not shed their cultures at
> the
> > laboratory or classroom door; their practices reflect their values,
> belief
> > systems, and worldviews. Medin and Bang argue further that scientist
> > diversity—the participation of researchers and educators with different
> > cultural orientations—provides new perspectives and leads to more
> effective
> > science and better science education.
> >
> > Medin and Bang compare Native American and European American orientations
> > toward the natural world and apply these findings to science education.
> The
> > European American model, they find, sees humans as separated from nature;
> > the Native American model sees humans as part of a natural ecosystem.
> Medin
> > and Bang then report on the development of ecologically oriented and
> > community-based science education programs on the Menominee reservation
> in
> > Wisconsin and at the American Indian Center of Chicago. Medin and Bang’s
> > novel argument for scientist diversity also has important implications
> for
> > questions of minority underrepresentation in science.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Molly Shea
> >
> > On Fri, Dec 2, 2016 at 3:47 PM, Edward Wall <ewall@umich.edu> wrote:
> >
> >> Carrie
> >>
> >> My read of Barton’s publications is that she is using the Maker
> >> movement as a platform as regards issues of equity and science taken
> >> broadly. Is this a fair read or are there other important factors I am
> >> missing??
> >>
> >> My read of a nice paper published by Jessica Thompson and others in
> >> TCR is that she sees what she terms as 'rigor and responsiveness’ as the
> >> key element. In my words - not hers - key is respect for the discipline
> >> (rigor) and key is respect for each other (responsiveness). Is this a
> fair
> >> read or are there other important factors I am missing?
> >>
> >> Megan Bang seems less in the the science/math loop although she just
> >> may not have published much in this area. I did see one paper that, one
> >> might say, addressed what some would term ethnomathematics.
> >>
> >> However, I see nothing in the work of these researchers in the
> discipline
> >> of mathematics per se. Perhaps you could point me in the right
> direction?
> >>
> >> Here is why I’m asking. Just assume that I am a dumb mathematics
> educator
> >> (which I am - smile) and I wish to help those I teach (which I do) -
> i.e.
> >> those who will be elementary and secondary mathematics teachers - in
> >> somehow implementing something like rigor and responsiveness.’ I do
> >> understand that curriculum and teaching are intertwined, but I also know
> >> that teachers enact curriculum and may or may not choose make room for
> >> responsiveness (that was also a point in the Thompson article). Now it
> is
> >> possible that all my students will, on their own and in their own
> >> classrooms, develop substantial notions of rigor and responsiveness,
> but it
> >> is possible that some might struggle. What experiences might I and
> others
> >> design to help those that struggle; for instance, what constitutes rigor
> >> (one can certainly be under or over rigorous). Likewise, what
> constitutes
> >> responsiveness (one certainly doesn’t need to talk to be responsive).
> Often
> >> people such as I do have relations with those, say, in mathematics,
> child
> >> development, and educational philosophy (among others). But, perhaps you
> >> don’t see this as happening in the college classroom, but during
> teaching
> >> itself. This still raises the interesting question as to what should
> occur
> >> in the college classroom (although some would just abolish such
> classrooms,
> >> perhaps understandably). Maybe it is too soon to ask such a question,
> but
> >> until it is answered in some pragmatic fashion, dumb mathematics
> educators
> >> such as myself will continue muddle to the benefit of none and, perhaps,
> >> detriment of all.
> >>
> >> Ed Wall
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>> On Dec 1, 2016, at 3:19 PM, carrie.allen@sri.com wrote:
> >>>
> >>> Hi all,
> >>>
> >>> Sorry to be joining this strand late, but I wanted to jump in regarding
> >> other possibilities or models of learning in mathematics and science.
> >> First, I want to say that our comments in this paper were not trying to
> >> suggest that students in US schools are all doomed to have hollow ideas
> >> about math and science and fragile identities because of it. There are
> >> certainly many current models - such as in Angie Calabrese Barton’s
> work at
> >> Michigan State University and Jessica Thompson’s and Megan Bang’s work
> at
> >> the University of Washington that disrupt the neoliberal model and
> >> normalized conceptions of math and science, and that engage young
> people in
> >> the practices of the disciplines in meaningful and authentic ways. Math
> and
> >> science in these models are frameworks for engaging in and making sense
> of
> >> the world, and students in these models are positioned as those who
> utilize
> >> the resources and tools within these frameworks to pursue problems,
> >> questions, interests. Youth in these models live into more nuanced ways
> of
> >> being mathematical or scientific, and have more sophisticated means by
> >> which to imagine possible selves (and pathways). And, I’m not entirely
> sure
> >> how to articulate it, but, in these models math and science too are
> >> “living” – being shaped in use and expanded in its possibilities.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> --
> >>>
> >>> CARRIE D. ALLEN, Ph.D.
> >>> STEM Researcher
> >>> SRI International
> >>> Center for Technology in Learning
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> (650) 859-5262
> >>> Twitter: @CarrieDAllen2
> >>> Skype: carrie.allen_9
> >>>
> >>> On 11/17/16, 7:16 PM, "xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu on behalf of
> >> lpscholar2@gmail.com" <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu on behalf of
> >> lpscholar2@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>>
> >>> So basically engaging in play may be foundational to learning a
> >> particular disciplinary subject matter including mathematical play.
> >>> This playful approach as counterpoint to formal high stakes
> >> approaches. This places the scope of play (itself) at the center of our
> >> inquiry.
> >>> This feels intuitively to be relevant to exemplary ways of learning.
> >>>
> >>> Like imagination, play is not taken seriously , but may be
> >> foundational or necessary for learning that is exemplary.
> >>>
> >>>
> >>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
> >>>
> >>> From: Edward Wall
> >>> Sent: November 17, 2016 4:45 PM
> >>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
> >>>
> >>> Larry
> >>>
> >>> There are, at least, four somewhat current possibilities (I’m
> >> not sure if they should be called exemplars) as regards mathematics
> >>>
> >>> 1. Summerhill (and, perhaps, some other English private schools)
> >>> 2. Some private schools in the US (a book was written by a teacher at
> >> one. If there is any interest I’ll see if I can dig up the title).
> >>> 3. The case of Louis P. Benezet in a US public school in1929
> >>> 4. There is some indication that schools in Finland and the
> >> Netherlands are, perhaps, a little less ‘neoliberal' (however, the
> evidence
> >> isn’t clear)
> >>>
> >>> Basically in some of the above formal mathematics instruction is put
> >> off until either children ask or until until fourth or fifth grade;
> >> however, children engage in, you might say, mathematical play (Dewey
> >> recommended something like this). This is, by the way and according to
> >> some, also what a good mathematics preK program looks like. Also, this
> is a
> >> bit as regards mathematics what the ancient Greek version of schooling
> for
> >> the elite looked like (i.e. mathematics was put off).
> >>>
> >>> Ed
> >>>
> >>>> On Nov 17, 2016, at 3:05 PM, lpscholar2@gmail.com wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> The question remains, if this neoliberal context generates
> >> (hollowed-out) educational *spaces* or institutions then is it possible
> we
> >> are able to offer exemplars of other educational places (current or
> >> historical) that manifested different kinds of identity formation that
> were
> >> not hollowed out. I speculate these exemplars would embody or incarnate
> >> deeply historical and ethical orientations and practices.
> >>>> If we have lost our way, are there other models (cultural imaginaries)
> >> that co-generate developmental narratives that will nurture well-being?
> >>>>
> >>>> Exemplary models that point in a certain direction
> >>>>
> >>>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
> >>>>
> >>>> From: Huw Lloyd
> >>>> Sent: November 17, 2016 11:32 AM
> >>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
> >>>>
> >>>> Alfredo,
> >>>>
> >>>> Yes, they're pathological. I am merely saying that the problems
> >> inherent
> >>>> in the pathology can be edifying. No, I don't think the issues can be
> >>>> transcended within conventional practices. Perhaps the best that can
> be
> >>>> achieved is that the students recognise an institutional need for
> "good
> >>>> behaviour" and the teacher recognises an educational need for real
> >> problem
> >>>> solving. For "real" education, we would need something like Davydov's
> >>>> system. But this is merely one view of the purpose of "education".
> There
> >>>> are many who don't seem to recognise these (and other) important
> >>>> implications.
> >>>>
> >>>> Best,
> >>>> Huw
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>>
> >>>> On 17 November 2016 at 18:11, Alfredo Jornet Gil <a.j.gil@iped.uio.no
> >
> >>>> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>>> Huw,
> >>>>>
> >>>>> great comments. I like what you say, that the (institutional, social)
> >>>>> process always is educational, and I agree: it develops into the
> >> formation
> >>>>> of habit and character. But I still wonder whether all educational
> >>>>> processes lead to growth or development, or whether we rather should
> be
> >>>>> able to identify some processes as, we may call them, *pathological*
> >> (or
> >>>>> perhaps involutive?). There you have Bateson on double bind and
> >>>>> schizophrenia, for example. Here, in the article, we have some young
> >>>>> students that enter a system that generates a double bind (it was
> Mike
> >> who
> >>>>> made me aware of the connection with double bind). The question is,
> >> will
> >>>>> the system develop without some form of awareness *about* the double
> >> bind
> >>>>> that overcomes it by generating a system that does not only include
> the
> >>>>> double bind, but also its own description (thereby becoming a higher
> >> order
> >>>>> system, one in which participants, students and teachers, come to
> grow
> >>>>> rather than come to stall).
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Alfredo
> >>>>> ________________________________________
> >>>>> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.
> edu
> >>>
> >>>>> on behalf of Huw Lloyd <huw.softdesigns@gmail.com>
> >>>>> Sent: 17 November 2016 10:54
> >>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Alfredo,
> >>>>>
> >>>>> The 'zone' is always present. Whether it is recognised or not is
> >> another
> >>>>> matter.
> >>>>> I do not think this interpretation is quite a zero sum game, because
> >> there
> >>>>> is always the aspect that the institutionalised process is
> educational
> >> --
> >>>>> the laws reveal themselves one way or another. So (from an Illich
> >>>>> perspective) the opportunity to discover what is real remains, it
> just
> >>>>> takes a different course.
> >>>>>
> >>>>> Best,
> >>>>> Huw
> >>>>>
> >>>>> On 17 November 2016 at 07:37, Alfredo Jornet Gil <
> a.j.gil@iped.uio.no>
> >>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>
> >>>>>> What touches me of the article is something that perhaps relates to
> >> this
> >>>>>> tension that I find between David's (individualistic?) approach to
> >>>>>> prolepsis in his post (David, I thought, and continue thinking, that
> >>>>>> prolepsis refers to something that emerges in the relation between
> >> two,
> >>>>> not
> >>>>>> something that either is present or absent within a person), and
> >>>>> Phillip's
> >>>>>> view of young people figuring out what life is all about just as all
> >> we
> >>>>> do.
> >>>>>> And so here (and in any neoliberal school context) we have
> wonderfully
> >>>>>> beautiful young people more or less interested in science or in
> maths,
> >>>>> but
> >>>>>> all eager to live a life and evolve as best as they can (whatever
> that
> >>>>> best
> >>>>>> may mean for each one). And then you see how the history and context
> >> that
> >>>>>> they come into gives them everything they need to develop motives
> and
> >>>>>> goals; to then make sure that the majority of them won't make it so
> >> that
> >>>>>> only a few privileged (or in the case of Margaret's paper none,
> >> according
> >>>>>> to the authors) succeed. And then what remains is not just a
> >> hollowed-out
> >>>>>> science and math identity, but also a hollowed-out soul that had
> >> illusion
> >>>>>> and now just doesn't. Not only a failure to provide opportunities to
> >>>>>> learners to become anything(one) good about science and math, but
> >> also a
> >>>>>> robbing of other possible paths of development that may had grown in
> >>>>> people
> >>>>>> if they had been hanging out with some other better company. Do we
> >> have a
> >>>>>> term to refer to the opposite of a zone of proximal development? Not
> >> just
> >>>>>> the absence of it, but the strangling of it.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Alfredo
> >>>>>> ________________________________________
> >>>>>> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.
> >> edu>
> >>>>>> on behalf of White, Phillip <Phillip.White@ucdenver.edu>
> >>>>>> Sent: 17 November 2016 06:29
> >>>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> David, the examples on page 193, students 1, 2 & 3 - aren't these
> >>>>> examples
> >>>>>> of proleptic thought - especially for student 2, who looks at where
> >> she
> >>>>> is
> >>>>>> "I have my own standards", a statement of the present, then a
> looking
> >>>>> back
> >>>>>> at what has happened, "I like to get straight A's". and then
> setting
> >> a
> >>>>>> target for the future, "help for like to get in college and stuff,
> so
> >>>>> yeah,
> >>>>>> I participate in a lot of stuff." ending with a reassertion of
> present
> >>>>>> activities to attain future goals.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> and there is a preponderance of the use of "I", rather than "you".
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> i'd give the young people for credit than a myopia focused merely on
> >>>>> their
> >>>>>> age: the business of young people is figuring out what life is all
> >> about
> >>>>>> and how to participate, just as adults and infants and old people
> >> like me
> >>>>>> do.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> i'm not convinced that your arguments are supported by the data in
> >> this
> >>>>>> Eisenhard / Allen paper.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> phillip
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> ________________________________
> >>>>>> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.
> >> edu>
> >>>>>> on behalf of David Kellogg <dkellogg60@gmail.com>
> >>>>>> Sent: Wednesday, November 16, 2016 1:24:35 PM
> >>>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion Re-started
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Actually, Henry, I was attacking the idea that tense is an empty
> >> mental
> >>>>>> space. I guess I am a little like Larry: when we discuss articles I
> >> have
> >>>>> a
> >>>>>> strong tendency to try to make them relevant to what I am doing
> rather
> >>>>> than
> >>>>>> to drop what I am doing and go and discuss what everybody else is
> >>>>>> discussing. So what I am doing right now is trying to make sense of
> >> some
> >>>>>> story-telling data where the adults are all over the map on tenses,
> >> and
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>> kids seem to stick to one tense only. The adults are slipping in and
> >> out
> >>>>> of
> >>>>>> mental spaces. The kids are telling stories.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> I think the relevance to the article is this: When you look at the
> way
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>> article frames institutional practices and figured worlds, we see
> >>>>>> prolepsis--a preoccupation with the future. But when we look at what
> >> the
> >>>>>> kids are doing and saying it is very much in the moment. Is this
> >> simply
> >>>>>> because mental processes like "like" and "want" tend to take simple
> >>>>> present
> >>>>>> (because they are less defined than material processes)? Or is it
> >> because
> >>>>>> while the institutions have the near future firmly in view and the
> >>>>> figured
> >>>>>> worlds have irrealis in view, the business of young people is youth?
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Vygotsky points out that the question the interviewer asks is very
> >> much a
> >>>>>> part of the data. For example, if you ask a question using "you" you
> >>>>> often
> >>>>>> get "you" in reply, even if you design your question to get "I".
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> Q: Why do you want to kill yourself?
> >>>>>> A: The same reason everybody wants to kill themselves. You want to
> >> find
> >>>>> out
> >>>>>> if anybody really cares.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> To take another example that is probably more relevant to readers:
> >> both
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>> Brexit vote and the American elections are clear examples of
> >> statistical
> >>>>>> unreliability in that if you tried to repeat the election the
> morning
> >>>>> after
> >>>>>> you would probably get an utterly different result. Take all of
> those
> >>>>> black
> >>>>>> voters and the real working class voters who voted Obama but
> couldn't
> >> be
> >>>>>> bothered for Hillary (not the imaginary "white working class voters"
> >> who
> >>>>>> work in imaginary industries in Iowa, rural Pennsylvania, North
> >> Carolina
> >>>>>> and Florida). They might well have behaved rather differently
> knowing
> >> how
> >>>>>> imminent the neo-Confederacy really was. This is usually presented
> as
> >>>>>> "buyer's remorse," but it's more than that; the event itself would
> be
> >>>>> part
> >>>>>> of its replication. This is something that statistical models that
> use
> >>>>>> standard error of the mean cannot build in (they work on the
> >> impossible
> >>>>>> idea that you can repeat an event ten or twenty thousand times
> without
> >>>>> any
> >>>>>> memory at all).
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> In the same way, when you interview a group of students together you
> >>>>> notice
> >>>>>> that they tend to model answers on each other rather than on your
> >>>>> question,
> >>>>>> and when you interview them separately, you notice that YOU tend to
> >>>>> change
> >>>>>> your question according to the previous answer you received. On the
> >> one
> >>>>>> hand, life is not easily distracted by its own future: it is too
> >> wholly
> >>>>>> there in each moment of existence. On the other hand, each of these
> >>>>> moments
> >>>>>> includes the previous one, and therefore all the previous ones, in
> >>>>> itself.
> >>>>>> The past weighs like a nightmare on the brain of the living, and
> >> objects
> >>>>> in
> >>>>>> the rear view mirror are always closer than they appear.
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> David Kellogg
> >>>>>> Macquarie University
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>> On Wed, Nov 16, 2016 at 10:23 AM, HENRY SHONERD <hshonerd@gmail.com
> >
> >>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>>> David,
> >>>>>>> I was puzzled that you found Langacker to be relevant to this
> topic,
> >>>>> but
> >>>>>>> the last paragraph of your post makes an important connection
> between
> >>>>>>> Langacker and Vygotsky: Both see speech acts as staged…interactants
> >>>>> view
> >>>>>>> themselves as “on stage”. I think the book by Vera and Reuben is
> >>>>> largely
> >>>>>>> about how differently math is “staged” by working mathematicians as
> >>>>>>> contrasted with doing math in school. I think it would be
> interesting
> >>>>> to
> >>>>>>> analyze how natural language and the language of math scaffold each
> >>>>> other
> >>>>>>> in both contexts. Word problems have been a well-used way of
> >> connecting
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>> two languages; stats and graphs are commonly used in the media to
> >>>>> clarify
> >>>>>>> and elaborate text in articles on economics, presidential
> elections,
> >>>>> and
> >>>>>>> what not.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> I would love to read your “unpublishable” on Langacker and Halliday
> >> on
> >>>>>>> tense. What I recall from reading Langacker is his interest in
> “basic
> >>>>>>> domains”, starting with the temporal and spatial. Somewhere he has
> >> said
> >>>>>>> that he believes that the temporal domain is the more basic. As
> you’d
> >>>>>>> guess, the spatial domain is especially useful in elucidating what
> he
> >>>>>> calls
> >>>>>>> “things” (nouns are conceptually about things); the temporal domain
> >> is
> >>>>>> more
> >>>>>>> closely connected to what he calls “processes” wherein he analyzes
> >>>>> tense
> >>>>>>> and aspect.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> I think Langacker would agree that his work in cognitive grammar
> has
> >> a
> >>>>>>> long way to go in contributing to the idea that grammar is usage
> >> based,
> >>>>>>> rather than some autonomous module, but he is working on it. I
> think
> >>>>>> there
> >>>>>>> is a potential for connecting Halliday and Langacker, though I’m
> not
> >>>>>> smart
> >>>>>>> enough to convince you of that evidently. Somehow the connection
> must
> >>>>> be
> >>>>>>> made by staying close to the data, “thick description”
> ethnographers
> >>>>> are
> >>>>>>> fond of saying. I think the article by Carrie and Margaret is
> raising
> >>>>>> this
> >>>>>>> issue.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> The “hollowed out” math curriculum in the article resonates with
> the
> >>>>>>> “potholes” you say teachers must watch out for. Some may say that
> >> the
> >>>>>>> hollowing out is typical even of “elite” K-12 schools. Some may say
> >>>>> that
> >>>>>>> this is deliberate. I would say my own experience of math in school
> >> was
> >>>>>>> often hollowed out, which I sensed, but didn’t discover until I got
> >> to
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>> “pure math” department in the mid 60s at Univ of Texas at Austin
> >> under
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>> leadership of Robert Lee Moore. He is a main protagonist in
> Chapter 8
> >>>>> of
> >>>>>>> Vera’s and Reuben’s book.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> I’ll end it there.
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>> Henry
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> On Nov 15, 2016, at 1:38 PM, David Kellogg <dkellogg60@gmail.com>
> >>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Henry:
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> I just wrote another unpublishable comparing how Langacker and
> >>>>>>>> Halliday treat tense, and I'm starting to come to grips with the
> >>>>>>> different
> >>>>>>>> theory of experience underlying the two grammars. Langacker
> somehow
> >>>>>> sees
> >>>>>>> it
> >>>>>>>> as creating empty mental space (and aspect as creating space
> within
> >>>>>>> space).
> >>>>>>>> Halliday sees tense as a way of abstracting concrete doings and
> >>>>>>> happenings.
> >>>>>>>> Halliday's tense system is not spatial at all but temporal: it's
> >>>>>>> temporally
> >>>>>>>> deictic and then temporally recursive: a kind of time machine that
> >>>>>>>> simultaneously transports and orients the speaker either
> >>>>> proleptically
> >>>>>> or
> >>>>>>>> retroleptically. So for example if I say to you that this article
> we
> >>>>>> are
> >>>>>>>> discussing is going to have been being discussed for two or three
> >>>>> weeks
> >>>>>>>> now, then "is going" is a kind of time machine that takes you into
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>>>> future, from which "You are Here" vantage point the article has
> been
> >>>>>>> (past)
> >>>>>>>> being discussed (present). Present in the past in the future.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> And that got me thinking about theory and practice. It seems to me
> >>>>> that
> >>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>> they are related, but simultaneously and not sequentially. That
> is,
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>>>> output of one is not the input of the other: they are simply more
> >> and
> >>>>>>> less
> >>>>>>>> abstract ways of looking at one and the same thing. So for example
> >> in
> >>>>>>> this
> >>>>>>>> article the tasks of theory and practice are one and the same: the
> >>>>> task
> >>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>> theory is really to define as precisely as possible the domain,
> the
> >>>>>>> scope,
> >>>>>>>> the range of the inquiry into authoring math and science
> identities
> >>>>> and
> >>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>> task of practice is to ask what exactly you want to do in this
> >>>>>>>> domain/scope/range--to try to understand how they are hollowed
> out a
> >>>>>>> little
> >>>>>>>> better so that maybe teachers like you and me can help fill the
> damn
> >>>>>>>> potholes in a little. You can't really do the one without doing
> the
> >>>>>>> other:
> >>>>>>>> trying to decide the terrain under study without deciding some
> task
> >>>>>> that
> >>>>>>>> you want to do there is like imagining tense as empty mental space
> >>>>> and
> >>>>>>> not
> >>>>>>>> as some actual, concrete doing or happening. Conversely, the way
> you
> >>>>>> dig
> >>>>>>>> the hole depends very much on how big and where you want it.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> So there are three kinds of mental spaces in the first part of the
> >>>>>>> article:
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> a) institutional arrangements (e.g. "priority improvement plans",
> >>>>>>>> career-academy/comprehensive school status STEM tracks, AP
> classes)
> >>>>>>>> b) figured worlds (e.g. 'good students', and 'don't cares', or
> what
> >>>>>>> Eckhart
> >>>>>>>> and McConnell-Ginet called 'jocks', 'nerds', 'burnouts',
> >>>>>> 'gangbangers')
> >>>>>>>> c) authored identities (i.e. what kids say about themselves and
> what
> >>>>>> they
> >>>>>>>> think about themselves)
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Now, I think it's possible to make this distinction--but they are
> >>>>>>> probably
> >>>>>>>> better understood not as mental spaces (in which case they really
> do
> >>>>>>>> overlap) but rather as doings (or, as is my wont, sayings).
> >> Different
> >>>>>>>> people are saying different things: a) is mostly the sayings of
> the
> >>>>>>> school
> >>>>>>>> boards and administrators, b) is mostly the sayings of teachers
> and
> >>>>>>> groups
> >>>>>>>> of kids, and c) is mostly the sayings of individual students. It's
> >>>>>> always
> >>>>>>>> tempting for a theory to focus on c), because that's where all the
> >>>>> data
> >>>>>>> is
> >>>>>>>> and it's tempting for practice too, because if you are against
> what
> >>>>> is
> >>>>>>>> happening in a) and in b), that's where the most likely point of
> >>>>>>>> intervention is.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> "But the data does suggest that the "figured worlds" are figured
> by
> >>>>>>>> authored identities--not by institutional arrangements. Is that
> just
> >>>>> an
> >>>>>>>> artefact of the warm empathy of the authors for the words
> (although
> >>>>>> maybe
> >>>>>>>> not the exact wordings) of their subjects, or is it real grounds
> for
> >>>>>>> hope?
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> Marx says (beginning of the 18th Brumaire): "*Men make* their own
> >>>>>>> *history*,
> >>>>>>>> *but they* do *not make* it as *they* please; *they* do *not make*
> >> it
> >>>>>>>> under self-selected circumstances, *but* under circumstances
> >> existing
> >>>>>>>> already, given and transmitted from the *past*. The tradition of
> all
> >>>>>> dead
> >>>>>>>> generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living."
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> It's a good theory, i.e. at once a truth and a tragedy. And it's a
> >>>>>>>> theory treats time as time and not as an empty stage.
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> David Kellogg
> >>>>>>>> Macquarie University
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>> On Mon, Nov 14, 2016 at 9:39 AM, HENRY SHONERD <
> hshonerd@gmail.com>
> >>>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> All,
> >>>>>>>>> I have read only part of Margaret’s and Carrie’s article, but I
> >>>>> wanted
> >>>>>>> to
> >>>>>>>>> jump in with a reference to a book by Vygotskian Vera
> John-Steiner
> >>>>> and
> >>>>>>> her
> >>>>>>>>> mathematician husband Reuben Hersh: Loving and Hating
> Mathematics:
> >>>>>>>>> Challenging the Mathematical Life. Huw’s point (v) which refers
> to
> >>>>>>>>> “identities of independence and finding out sustainable within
> >> these
> >>>>>>>>> settings (school math classes) spent high school. Vera’s and
> >>>>> Reuben’s
> >>>>>>> book
> >>>>>>>>> contrasts what it’s like to work and think like a real (working)
> >>>>>>>>> mathematician (what I think Huw is talking about) and what we
> call
> >>>>>>>>> mathematics in the classroom. Chapter 8 of the book "The Teaching
> >> of
> >>>>>>>>> Mathematics: Fierce or Friendly?” is interesting reading and
> could
> >>>>> be
> >>>>>>>>> relevant to this discussion.
> >>>>>>>>> Henry
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>> On Nov 13, 2016, at 2:47 PM, Huw Lloyd <
> huw.softdesigns@gmail.com>
> >>>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> Dear Margaret
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> My reading has not been a particularly careful one, so I leave
> it
> >>>>> to
> >>>>>>>>>> yourselves to judge the usefulness of these points.
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> i) Whether arguments can be made (for or against) a nebulous
> term
> >>>>>>>>>> (neoliberalism) with its political associations, by arguments
> >> about
> >>>>>>>>>> identity that are themselves not deliberately political.
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> ii) Whether it is better not to focus essentially on the place
> of
> >>>>>>>>> identity.
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> iii) Whether it is worthwhile contrasting the role/identity of
> >>>>> "model
> >>>>>>>>>> student" with "identities" that anyone excelling at STEM
> subjects
> >>>>>> would
> >>>>>>>>>> relate to. On this, I would point to the importance with
> >>>>> identifying
> >>>>>>>>> with
> >>>>>>>>>> appreciations for "awareness of not knowing" and "eagerness to
> >> find
> >>>>>>> out"
> >>>>>>>>>> (which also entails learning about what it means to know).
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> iv) Whether you detect that to the degree that an identity is
> >>>>>>>>> foregrounded
> >>>>>>>>>> in the actual practice of STEM work (rather than as background
> >>>>> social
> >>>>>>>>>> appeasement), it is being faked? That is, someone is playing at
> >> the
> >>>>>>> role
> >>>>>>>>>> rather than actually committing themselves to finding out about
> >>>>>>> unknowns.
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> v) Whether, in fact, there is actually a "tiered" or varied set
> of
> >>>>>>>>>> acceptable "identities" within the settings you explored, such
> >> that
> >>>>>>>>>> identities of independence and finding out are sustainable
> within
> >>>>>> these
> >>>>>>>>>> settings, possibly representing a necessary fudge to deal with
> the
> >>>>>>>>>> requirements placed upon the institutions.
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> Best,
> >>>>>>>>>> Huw
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>> On 12 November 2016 at 20:30, Margaret A Eisenhart <
> >>>>>>>>>> margaret.eisenhart@colorado.edu> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> Hello Everyone,
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> Carrie and I are newcomers to this list, and we thank you for
> the
> >>>>>>>>>>> opportunity to engage with you about our article, “Hollowed
> Out.”
> >>>>>> We
> >>>>>>>>> also
> >>>>>>>>>>> hope for your patience as we learn to participate in the stream
> >> of
> >>>>>>>>>>> thinking here!
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> Given the comments so far, we are intrigued by others’ ideas
> >> about
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>> link between our theory and our data. On this topic, we would
> >>>>> like
> >>>>>> to
> >>>>>>>>>>> make clear that we did not intend to suggest that the students
> >>>>> were
> >>>>>>>>> making
> >>>>>>>>>>> sense of their lives in the same way that we interpreted them
> >>>>>> through
> >>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>> lens of our theory. Our claim is that opportunities and figured
> >>>>>> worlds
> >>>>>>>>> are
> >>>>>>>>>>> resources for identity and that the students' words to us
> >>>>> reflected
> >>>>>>>>>>> perspectives consistent with neoliberalism, with some pretty
> >>>>> serious
> >>>>>>>>>>> implications. Like Phillip White, we are interested in what
> >>>>> theories
> >>>>>>>>>>> others would use to explain the data we presented.
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> Like Mike Cole, we are also intrigued by the prospect of
> >>>>> “exemplars”
> >>>>>>> we
> >>>>>>>>>>> might turn to.
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> We look forward to hearing your thoughts.
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> Margaret Eisenhart
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> On 11/11/16, 11:35 AM, "lpscholar2@gmail.com" <
> >>>>> lpscholar2@gmail.com
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> A resumption in exploring the meaning and sense (preferably
> sens
> >>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>> this
> >>>>>>>>>>>> term draws attention to movement and direction within meaning
> >> and
> >>>>>>>>> sense)
> >>>>>>>>>>>> of this month’s article.
> >>>>>>>>>>>> The paper begins with the title and the image of
> (hollowed-out)
> >>>>>>> meaning
> >>>>>>>>>>>> and sense that is impoverished and holds few resources for
> >>>>>>> developing a
> >>>>>>>>>>>> deeper sens of identity.
> >>>>>>>>>>>> The article concludes with the implication that the work of
> >>>>> social
> >>>>>>>>>>>> justice within educational institutions is not about improving
> >>>>>>>>>>>> educational outcome in neoliberal terms; the implications of
> the
> >>>>>>> study
> >>>>>>>>>>>> are about *reorganizing* the identities – particulary
> >>>>>>>>>>>> identities-with-standind that young people are *exposed* to,
> can
> >>>>>>>>>>>> articulate, and can act on (in school and beyond).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> I would say this is taking an ethical stand?.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> I will now turn to page 189 and the section
> >> (identity-in-context)
> >>>>>> to
> >>>>>>>>>>>> amplify the notion of (cultural imaginary) and (figured
> worlds).
> >>>>>>>>>>>> This imaginary being the site or location of
> history-in-person.
> >>>>>> That
> >>>>>>> is
> >>>>>>>>>>>> identity is a form of legacy (or *text*) ABOUT the kind of
> >> person
> >>>>>> one
> >>>>>>>>> is
> >>>>>>>>>>>> or has become in responding to (external) circumstances.
> >>>>>>>>>>>> These external circumstances are EXPERIENCED primarily in the
> >>>>>>>>>>>> organization of local practices and cultural imaginaries
> >> (figured
> >>>>>>>>> worlds)
> >>>>>>>>>>>> that circulate and *give meaning* (and sens) to local
> practices
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Figured worlds are interpreted following Holland as socially
> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>> culturally *realms of interpretation* and certain players are
> >>>>>>>>> recognized
> >>>>>>>>>>>> as (exemplars).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> As such cultural, social, historical, dialogical psychological
> >>>>>>>>>>>> (imaginaries) are handmaidens of the imaginal *giving meaning*
> >> to
> >>>>>>>>> *what*
> >>>>>>>>>>>> goes on in the directions we take together.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Two key terms i highlight are (exemplars) and (direction) we
> >>>>> take.
> >>>>>>>>>>>> The realm of the ethical turn
> >>>>>>>>>>>> What are the markers and signposts emerging in the deeper
> >> ethical
> >>>>>>> turn
> >>>>>>>>>>>> that offers more than a hollowed-out answer.
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Are there any *ghost* stories of exemplars we can turn to as
> >> well
> >>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>> living exemplars? By ghosts i mean ancestors who continue as
> >>>>>> beacons
> >>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>> hope exemplifying *who* we are.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> My way into exploring the impoverished narratives of the
> >>>>> neoliberal
> >>>>>>>>>>>> imaginary and reawakening exemplary ancestors or ghosts from
> >>>>> their
> >>>>>>>>>>>> slumber to help guide us through these multiple imaginaries
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> From: mike cole
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: November 9, 2016 3:04 PM
> >>>>>>>>>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion
> >>>>> Re-started
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> Alfredo--
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> for any who missed the initial article sent out, you might
> send
> >>>>>> them
> >>>>>>>>>>>> here:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> http://lchc.ucsd.edu/mca/
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> I am meeting shortly with Bruce. A list of improvements to web
> >>>>> site
> >>>>>>>>>>>> welcome, although not clear how long they will take to
> >> implement.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> mike
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 2:38 PM, Alfredo Jornet Gil <
> >>>>>>>>> a.j.gil@iped.uio.no>
> >>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Dear all,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> last week I announced MCA's 3rd Issue article for discussion:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> "Hollowed Out: Meaning and Authoring of High School Math and
> >>>>>> Science
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Identities in the Context of Neoliberal Reform," by Margaret
> >>>>>>> Eisenhart
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Carrie Allen.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> The article is open access and will continue to be so during
> >> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> discussion time at this link.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks to everyone who begun the discussion early after I
> >> shared
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> link
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> last week, and sorry that we sort of brought the discussion
> to
> >> a
> >>>>>>> halt
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> until
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the authors were ready to discuss. I have now sent Margaret
> and
> >>>>>>> Carrie
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> posts that were produced then so that they could catch up,
> but
> >> I
> >>>>>>> also
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> invited them to feel free to move on an introduce themselves
> as
> >>>>>> soon
> >>>>>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> they ??wanted.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> It is not without some doubts that one introduces a
> discussion
> >>>>> of
> >>>>>> an
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> article in a moment that some US media have called as "An
> >>>>> American
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Tragedy"
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> and other international editorials are describing as "a dark
> >> day
> >>>>>> for
> >>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> world." But I believe that the paper may indeed offer some
> >>>>> grounds
> >>>>>>> for
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> discuss important issues that are at stake in everyone's home
> >>>>> now,
> >>>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Mike
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> recently describes in a touching post on the "local state of
> >>>>> mind"
> >>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> that
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> have to do with identity and its connection to a neoliberal
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> organisation of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the economy. It is not difficult to link neoliberalism to
> >>>>> Trump's
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> phenomenon and how it pervades very intimate aspects of
> >> everyday
> >>>>>>> life.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> If this was not enough, I think the authors' background on
> >>>>> women's
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> scholar
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> and professional careers in science is totally relevant to
> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> discussions
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> on gendered discourse we've been having. Now without halts, I
> >>>>> hope
> >>>>>>>>> this
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> thread gives joys and wisdom to all.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Alfredo
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> ________________________________________
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
> >>>>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.
> >>>>>>>>> edu>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> on behalf of Alfredo Jornet Gil <a.j.gil@iped.uio.no>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: 02 November 2016 01:48
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Thanks Mike and everyone! I am sure Margaret (and many of
> those
> >>>>>>> still
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> reading) will be happy to be able to catch up when she joins
> us
> >>>>>> next
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> week!
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Alfredo
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> ________________________________________
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
> >>>>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.
> >>>>>>>>> edu>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> on behalf of mike cole <mcole@ucsd.edu>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: 02 November 2016 01:32
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Gentlemen -- I believe Fernando told us that Margaret would
> be
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> able to join this discussion next week. Just a quick glance
> at
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> discussion so far indicates that there is a lot there to wade
> >>>>> into
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> before she has had a word.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> I am only part way through the article, expecting to have
> until
> >>>>>> next
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> week
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> to think about it.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> May I suggest your forbearance while this slow-poke tries to
> >>>>> catch
> >>>>>>> up!
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> mike
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> On Tue, Nov 1, 2016 at 3:38 PM, White, Phillip
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> <Phillip.White@ucdenver.edu
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> David & Larry, everyone else ...
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> by way of introduction, Margaret and Carrie point out that
> the
> >>>>>> data
> >>>>>>>>> in
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> this paper emerged through a three year study - which was
> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> processes
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> how students of color, interested in STEM, responded to the
> >>>>>>>>> externally
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> imposed neoliberal requirements. they framed their study
> using
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> theories
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> social practices on how identity developed in context.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> David, you reject the theories. or so i understand your
> >>>>>> position.
> >>>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> you
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> write: It's that the theory
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> contradicts my own personal theories.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> are you also rejecting the data as well? it seems as if you
> >>>>> are
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> suggesting this when you write: The authors find this point
> >> (in
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> case
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Lorena) somewhere between the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> beginning of the tenth and the end of the eleventh grade,
> but
> >> I
> >>>>>>> think
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that's just because it's where they are looking.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> you reject the narrative of Lorena on the grounds that it
> >> could
> >>>>>> be
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> traced
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> back to infancy.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> do you also reject the identical narrative found in the
> adult
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> practitioners within the context of the high schools? that
> >>>>> this
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> narrative
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> is not one of a contemporary neoliberal practice but rather
> >>>>> could
> >>>>>>> be
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> traced
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> back to, say, the mid 1600's new england colonies, in
> >>>>> particular
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> massachusettes, where the practices of public american
> >>>>> education
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> began?
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> to explain the data that emerged from the Eisenhart/Allen
> >>>>> study,
> >>>>>>> what
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> theories would you have used?
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> phillip
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> ________________________________
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> From: xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> <xmca-l-bounces@mailman.ucsd.edu>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> on behalf of lpscholar2@gmail.com <lpscholar2@gmail.com>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: Tuesday, November 1, 2016 7:03 AM
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> To: David Kellogg; eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Margaret and Carrie,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Thank you for this wonderful paper that explains the shallow
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> *hollowed-out* way of forming identity as a form of meaning
> >> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> sense. I
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> will add the French word *sens* which always includes
> >>>>> *direction*
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> within
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> meaning and sense.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> David, your response that what our theory makes sens of
> >> depends
> >>>>>> on
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> where
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> we are looking makes sens to me.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> You put in question the moment when the interpersonal (you
> and
> >>>>>> me)
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> way of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> authoring sens *shifts* or turns to cultural and historical
> >>>>> ways
> >>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> being
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> immersed in sens. The article refers to the
> >>>>>> *historical-in-person*.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> My further comment, where I am looking) is in the
> description
> >>>>> of
> >>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> sociocultural as a response to *externally changing
> >>>>>> circumstances*
> >>>>>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> process of *learning as becoming* (see page 190).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> The article says:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> This process is what Lave and Wenger (1991) and other
> >>>>>> Sociocultural
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> researchers have referred to as *learning as becoming,* that
> >>>>> is,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> learning
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that occurs as one becomes a certain kind of person in a
> >>>>>> particular
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> context. Identities conceived in this way are not stable or
> >>>>>> fixed.
> >>>>>>>>> As
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> *external circumstances* affecting a person change, so too
> may
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> identities that are produced *in response*. (Holland &
> >> Skinner,
> >>>>>>>>> 1997).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> In this version of *history-in-person* the identity
> processes
> >>>>>> that
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> start
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the process moving in a neoliberal *direction* are
> *external*
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> circumstances. I am not questioning this version of the
> >>>>>> importance
> >>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> external but do question if looking primarily or
> primordially
> >>>>> to
> >>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> external circumstances as central if we are not leaving a
> gap
> >>>>> in
> >>>>>>> our
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> notions of *sens*.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> If by looking or highlighting or illuminating the *external*
> >>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> highly
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> visible acts of the actual we are leaving a gap in
> actual*ity.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> A gap in *sens*.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> To be continued by others...
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Sent from my Windows 10 phone
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> From: David Kellogg
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Sent: October 31, 2016 2:15 PM
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> To: eXtended Mind, Culture, Activity
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Subject: [Xmca-l] Re: MCA Issue 3 article for discussion
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> I was turning Mike's request--for a short explanation of the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Halliday/Vygotsky interface--over in my mind for a few days,
> >>>>>> unsure
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> where
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> to start. I usually decide these difficult "where to start"
> >>>>>>> questions
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> in
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the easiest possible way, with whatever I happen to be
> working
> >>>>>> on.
> >>>>>>> In
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> this
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> case it's the origins of language in a one year old, a
> moment
> >>>>>> which
> >>>>>>>>> is
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> almost as mysterious to me as the origins of life or the Big
> >>>>>> Bang.
> >>>>>>>>> But
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> perhaps for that very reason it's not a good place to start
> >>>>> (the
> >>>>>>> Big
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Bang
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> always seemed to me to jump the gun a bit, not to mention
> the
> >>>>>>> origins
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> life).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Let me start with the "Hollowed Out" paper Alfredo just
> >>>>>>> thoughtfully
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> sent
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> around instead. My first impression is that this paper
> leaves
> >> a
> >>>>>>>>> really
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> big
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> gap between the data and the conclusions, and that this gap
> is
> >>>>>>>>> largely
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> filled by theory. Here are some examples of what I mean:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> a) "Whereas 'subject position' is given by society,
> >>>>> 'identity'
> >>>>>>> is
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> self-authored, although it must be recognized by others to
> be
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> sustained."
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> (p. 189)
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> b) "It is notable that this construction of a good student,
> >>>>>> though
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> familiar, does not make any reference to personal interest,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> excitement,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> or
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> engagement in the topics or content-related activities."
> (193)
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> c) "When students' statements such as 'I get it', 'I'm
> >>>>>> confident',
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> 'I'm
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> good at this', and 'I can pull this off' are interpreted in
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> context
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the figured world of math or science at the two schools,
> their
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> statements
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> index more than a grade. They reference a meaning system for
> >>>>>> being
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> good
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> in
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> math or science that includes the actor identity
> >>>>> characteristics
> >>>>>> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> being
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> able to grasp the subject matter easily, do the work
> quickly,
> >>>>> do
> >>>>>> it
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> without
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> help from others, do it faster than others, and get an A."
> >>>>> (193)
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> In each case, we are told to believe in a theory: "given by
> >>>>>>> society",
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> "self-authored", "does not make any reference", "the context
> >> of
> >>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> figured
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> world". It's not just that in each case the theory seems to
> go
> >>>>>>>>> against
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> data (although it certainly does in places, such as Lowena's
> >>>>>> views
> >>>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> a
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> tenth grader). I can always live with a theory that
> >> contradicts
> >>>>>> my
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> data:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that's what being a rationalist is all about. It's that the
> >>>>>> theory
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> contradicts my own personal theories.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> I don't believe that identity is self authored, and I also
> >>>>> don't
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> believe
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that subject position is given by society as a whole, I
> think
> >>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>> word
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> "good" does include personal interest, excitement, and
> >>>>> engagement
> >>>>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> much
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> as it includes being able to grasp the subject matter
> easily,
> >>>>> do
> >>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> work
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> quickly, do it without help from others, do it faster than
> >>>>> others
> >>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> get
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> an A. To me anyway, the key word in the data given in c) is
> >>>>>>> actually
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> "I"
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> and not "it" or "this": the students think they are talking
> >>>>>> about,
> >>>>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> therefore probably are actually talking about, a relation
> >>>>> between
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> their
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> inner states and the activity at hand or between the
> activity
> >>>>> at
> >>>>>>>>> hand
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the result they get; they are not invoking the figured world
> >> of
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> neoliberal
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> results and prospects.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> But never mind my own theories. Any gap is, after all, a
> good
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> opportunity
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> for theory building. The authors are raising a key issue in
> >>>>> both
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Vygotsky
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> and Halliday: when does an interpersonal relation become a
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> historico-cultural one? That is, when does that 'me" and
> "you"
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> relationship
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> in which I really do have the power to author my identity (I
> >>>>> can
> >>>>>>> make
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> up
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> any name I want and, within limits, invent my own history,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> particularly
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> if
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> I am a backpacker) give way to a job, an address, a number
> and
> >>>>> a
> >>>>>>>>> class
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> over
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> which I have very little power at all? When does the
> >>>>>> interpersonal
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> somehow
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> become an alien ideational "identity" that confronts me
> like a
> >>>>>>>>> strange
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> ghost when I look in the mirror?
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> The authors find this point (in the case of Lorena)
> somewhere
> >>>>>>> between
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> beginning of the tenth and the end of the eleventh grade,
> but
> >> I
> >>>>>>> think
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> that's just because it's where they are looking. We can
> >>>>> probably
> >>>>>>> find
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> roots of this distinction (between the interpersonal and the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> historico-cultural) as far back as we like, right back to
> >>>>>>> (Vygotsky)
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> the
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> moment when the child gives up the "self-authored" language
> at
> >>>>>> one
> >>>>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> takes on the language recognized by others and (Halliday)
> the
> >>>>>>> moment
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> when
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> the child distinguishes between Attributive identifying
> >> clauses
> >>>>>>> ("I'm
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> confident", "I'm good at this"), material processes ("I can
> >>>>> pull
> >>>>>>> this
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> off")
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> and mental ones ("I get it").
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> (To be continued...but not necessarily by me!)
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> David Kellogg
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> Macquarie University
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> On Mon, Oct 31, 2016 at 4:50 PM, Alfredo Jornet Gil
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> <a.j.gil@iped.uio.no
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> wrote:
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Dear xmca'ers,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> I am excited to announce the next article for discussion,
> >>>>> which
> >>>>>> is
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> now
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> available open access at the T&F MCA pages<
> >>>>>> http://www.tandfonline
> >>>>>>> .
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> com/doi/full/10.1080/10749039.2016.1188962>.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> After a really interesting discussion on Zaza's colourful
> >>>>> paper
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> (which
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> still goes on developed into a discussion on micro- and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> ontogenesis),
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> we
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> will from next week be looking at an article by Margaret
> >>>>>> Eisenhart
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> and
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Carrie Allen from the special issue on "Reimagining Science
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Education
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> in
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> the Neoliberal Global Context". I think the article, as the
> >>>>>> whole
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> issue,
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> offers a very neat example of research trying to tie
> together
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> cultural/economical? and developmental aspects (of identity
> >> in
> >>>>>>> this
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>> case).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Margaret has kindly accepted to join the discussion ?after
> US
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> elections
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> (which will surely keep the attention of many of us busy).
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> Meanwhile, I
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> share the link<http://www.tandfonline.
> >>>>>>> com/doi/full/10.1080/10749039
> >>>>>>>>>>> .
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> 2016.1188962> to the article (see above), and also attach
> it
> >>>>> as
> >>>>>>>>>>>>> PDF.
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> ??Good read!
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Alfredo
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>>
> >>>>>>
> >>>>>
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>>
> >>
> >>
> >>
>
>
>
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