Hi, Steve --
The CH-SIG is sponsoring and co-sponsoring multiple sessions; in addition,
our business meeting is a place to meet CHAt-ters and hear our guest
speakers address the implications of CHAT for the future of education. The
AERA program hasn't been compiled yet, but when it is, I will post the
information on sessions here.
Judy
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Gabosch [mailto:bebop101@comcast.net]
Sent: Wednesday, January 14, 2004 4:38 AM
To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
Subject: April AERA conference and CHAT mini-course
I am planning to register for the April AERA conference in San Diego to
attend this CHAT mini-course. I wish this mini-course was 4 days and not
just 4 hours - what a line-up! Are there other activities at the AERA
conference to recommend to a student of CHAT such as myself?
- Steve
AERA will be sponsoring a CHAT mini-course this year with eleven
instructors
who are expert in CHAT, most of them senior scholars:
Instructors: Geoffrey Bowker, Michael Cole, Yrjo Engestrom, Manuel
Espinoza,
Kris Gutierrez, Vera John Steiner, Elina Lampert Shepel, Jay Lemke,
Eugene
Matusov, Ana Marjanovic Shane, Gordon Wells, Stanton Wortham.
Both newcomers to CHAT and advanced doctoral students and emerging
scholars
are welcome to attend. 12 students will be selected on a competitive
basis
to work one-on-one with appropriate instructors. Those who wish to be
considered for this advanced status of participation should send a 5
page
description of their work that may include 1-2 pages of data and/or
questions. Those who wish to attend on any other basis should send a 1-2
page description of the research they intend to do or have already
begun.
Descriptions should be sent to the organizers:
Judy Diamondstone
jdiamondstone@clarku.edu
and
Bill Barowy
wbarowy@attbi.com
The mini-course is scheduled for Tuesday, April 13th, from 8:00am -
12:00pm.
A fuller description is attached.
Relevance of Cultural Historical Activity Theory to diverse projects of
education research
CHAT-based assumptions have influenced work in many different settings
both within and outside the field of education, in educational psychology
(Cole 1996); curriculum and instruction (Espinoza; Guttierez; Matusov;
Wells); creativity research (John Steiner); scientific and multi-media
literacy (Lemke); organizational learning and medical practices (Engestrom;
Bowker & Star), to name a few. New interpretations, applications, and
extensions of CHAT implicate tensions that must be understood to advance
this tradition in a principled way. How are other approaches to
sociocultural analysis, such as social semiotics, actor-network theory, and
dynamic systems theory, related to CHAT?
This mini-course is designed to support graduate students working in the
CHAT tradition or those whose work might benefit by familiarity with CHAT by
1. explicating CHAT principles in the light of the research and
scholarship of eminent instructors;
2. relating CHAT to other approaches to sociocultural analysis.
3. establishing links among new scholars doing related work;
4. linking new to senior scholars whose work is compatible and who can
help to advance new CHAT-related work and ensure its excellence.
It will also offer a forum for discussion of means to develop existing
CHAT-related resources to make them more useful to more graduate students.
TO PARTICIPATE
All participants will submit ahead of time 1-2 page descriptions of their
work and interest in CHAT to the organizers, who will assign them and
instructors to roundtables focused on compatible issues (and one roundtable
for newcomers to CHAT).
Advanced doctoral students may submit more extended (5 page) descriptions
of their research, samples of data, and CHAT-related conceptual &/or
methodological questions to the organizers. From these submissions, a subset
of 10-15 doctoral students will be selected on a competitive basis to
interact over their own research with instructors whose work is relevant to
their own and to work intensively with one or more peers doing similar work.
Instructors will cycle out of roundtables for 45 minute sessions with one or
more students with whom they have been paired
INSTRUCTORS
Geoffrey Bowker, in the Communications Department at the University of
California San Diego, works on information infrastructures focusing on
classification systems and collaborative work practices in fields such as
medicine, environmental science, industrial geophysics. He will discuss
distributed cognition as a significant aspect of cultural tools
Michael Cole, Professor at University of California San Diego and director
of the Laboratory of Culture and Human Cognition, has been influential in
disseminating CHAT throughout North American academia. He will be asked to
give his perspective on the history of CHAT in education research
Yrjö Engeström is a Professor and Director of the Center for Activity
Theory and Developmental Work Research at University of Helsinki, and
Professor at the University of California, San Diego. He studies
transformations in work and organizations. He will be asked how he
elaborated Leontev’s model of activity as a tool for intervention research
Manuel Espinoza, a graduate student at the University of California San
Diego, teaches CHAT and other courses and works with Kris Gutierrez and
Michael Cole in Fifth Dimension sites. He is interested in the migrant
experience, transformative education in the tradition of Freire, and
language ideologies. He will be asked how he considers the work of Vygotsky
and Luria to be relevant to transformative education
Kris Gutierrez, Professor of Urban Schooling at the University of
California San Diego, has published widely in arguing for “third spaces”
that facilitate the learning of empowering literacies by minority students.
She will be asked to trace the history of the notion of "third-ness" and
explain how it is an important contemporary contribution to CHAT
Vera John Steiner, Presidential Professor of Linguistics and Education at
the University of New Mexico, has published extensively on creativity and on
collaboration from a Vygotskian perspective. She will be asked to discuss
relations between private speech and collaborative interactions
Elina Lampert Shepel was trained in the Vygotsky school in Russia, has
worked internationally to develop teacher education programs, and teaches
education courses at Columbia University. She will be asked how activity
theory relates to teaching and learning
Jay Lemke, Professor, Educational Studies, the University of Michigan,
applies discourse and multimedia analysis to science education and other
fields; studies education reform and institutional change in the framework
of complex systems theory and multiple timescale analysis; and explores more
affectively engaging and culturally diverse modes of education, including
the potential role of popular culture media. He will be asked to discuss how
CHAT informs frameworks derived from the hard sciences and vice versa
Eugene Matusov, Associate Professor of Education, University of Delaware,
studies collaboration and learning in communities of practice. He draws on
Bakhtin to understand issues of identity and motivation in informal settings
and innovative educational institutions. . He will be asked how Bakhtin
relates to CHAT
Ana Marjanovic-Shane, schooled in Russia with members of the Vygotsky
school, has developed a theory of metaphor as a central semantic process in
meaning construction. She will be asked to discuss the intellectual roots of
her theory (Vygotsky, Bakhtin and American pragmatic linguistics), and how
they mutually inform each other
Gordon Wells, Professor of Education, University of California, Santa
Cruz, and formerly professor at the Ontario Institute for Studies in
Education of the University of Toronto, has for many years engaged in
collaborative action research with elementary and middle school teachers,
and has discussed in publications the compatibility between Systemic
Functional Linguistics and CHAT. He will be asked to explain these
relations, how they are useful for studying classrooms, and whether they are
useful in working with teachers and children.----
Stanton Wortham, Associate Professor and Chair, Educational Leadership
Division, Graduate School of Education, University of Pennsylvania, has
examined the operations of discourse in classrooms, television news, and
psychology interviews. He will be asked how linguistic anthropology informs
a theory of mediation
ORGANIZERS
Judy Diamondstone
jdiamondstone@clarku.edu
Bill Barowy
wbarowy@attbi.com
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