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Re: [xmca] Kndergarten Cram: When is play?



Many interesting points, of course, but I am struck by the issue of social class differences in play&learning and adult attitudes toward play. As well as cultural differences.
If we make a provisional binary out of creative learning vs. rote  
learning, and mean by this to include more playful approaches to  
learning (as well as learning from what appears to be, and maybe felt  
by kids as, play) on the one side, and all forms of over-structured,  
boring, authoritarian, prescribed-all-to-hell teaching (I won't say  
learning) on the other, then there has been a long discussion in the  
US about the hypothesis that more privileged social sectors favor the  
first, while less privileged ones favor the second.
One story about this is that elites learn to play, as their life  
privilege entitles them, while the oppressed learn to work without  
being in control of what they do. Another is that elites don't need  
highly structured learning conditions because their habitus, from home  
and family and peers, pre-adapts them to the kinds of "thinking/ 
discourse" that succeed in school, while more oppressed groups,  
lacking that advantage, need very explicit, structured instruction if  
they are to be able to master the Master's meaning system at all.
So here is a variation on Ulvi's hypothesis: what we are seeing in the  
routinization of middle-class education in the US is a de-skilling  
process, part of the gradual erosion of the middle class, pushing  
their children down the social scale, making their educations more  
like those of the (lower) working class. The _upper_ middle class has  
strongly resisted NCLB and its moronic pseudo-testing regimen and over- 
prescribed curricula, and the ruling class has just ignored it for the  
most part in their elite private schools. There have even been  
lawsuits against education departments on behalf of elite schools to  
exempt them from a lot of crap on the grounds that what they are  
already doing is better than what the "reforms" aim to produce.
The main liiberal support for NCLB came from those like Ted Kennedy  
who saw it as a way to put a floor under the worst of the education of  
the poor. [NCLB for our lucky non-US readers stands for the idiotic,  
rhetorical name given to the US education reform law "No Child Left  
Behind" ... which already says it was looking for support from those  
favoring the worst-educated students, even through it was drafted by  
those looking to subjugate the next generation to authoritarian models  
of education.]
How does this play in other countries/cultures?

JAY.

PS. In the US, it is only the upper middle class that corresponds to what is called the middle class in most other places. Our very broad middle class is really white-collar workers and well-paid blue-collar workers and their families. The upper middle is quite a distinct group, professionals and junior to middle managers. All an oversimplification of course, but my points won't make sense to non-US readers otherwise.

Jay Lemke
Professor
Educational Studies
University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI 48109
www.umich.edu/~jaylemke




On May 7, 2009, at 1:42 AM, David Kellogg wrote:

And then again, David, perhaps NOT. Here are some countervailing  
facts to consider, before we leap to conclusions about the malign  
effects of Confucianism (which, like most truly ancient cultural  
traditions, has an irrepressibly creative and humanist core) on  
dysfunctional American education.
a) The old Stevenson studies that first found a massive advantage  
for Asian schools also discovered that American schools spend FAR  
more time on "seatwork" than Asian schools do.
b) The 2002 PISA evaluation which found a massive advantage for  
Korean schools in things like literacy, science, and math ALSO found  
a massive advantage in creative problems solving (in fact, Korea  
scored first, whereas it was only second or third in other  
supposedly stronger areas based on rote learning).
c) The areas where we in Korea do have the MOST cram school  
involvement (e.g. English) are consistently our WEAKEST areas, not  
our strongest (we were 19th out of 20 countries in the British  
Council International English Language Testing Service evaluation).
d) In the sixties, Robert Kaplan, the founder of "Contrastive  
Rhetoric" attempted to argue that the "eight legged essay" of the  
imperial examination system (baguwen) was responsible for Chinese  
students' errors in composition; Mohan and Lo demonstrated that such  
effects could be found in work of almost ALL foreign students. Most  
Chinese students could not compose an eight legged essay in Chinese  
(it's actually a quite artistic form which takes a long time to  
master). Spoiler alert: Kaplan also believed that Russians and  
Frenchmen write in zigzags, Arabs in spirals, and the only true  
linear language was...you guessed it...English.
There's more! This is from Goncu, A. (1999) Children's Engagement in  
the World: Socicultural Perspectives. CUP.
Farver, J.M. (1999) Activity setting analysis: A model for examining  
the role of culture in development. pp . 99-127.
p. 116: 'Most European American mothers believed that play was a  
learning experience and was related to positive developmental  
outcomes for children, wheres most Korean-American mothers said that  
play was primarily for the children’s amusement.'
Tudge, J., Hogan, D., Lee, S.-E., Tammeveski, P., Meltsas, M.,  
Kulakova, N., Snezhkova, I and Putnam, S. (1999) Cultural  
heterogeneity: Parental values and beliefs and heir preschoolers’  
activities in the United States, South Korea, Russia, and Estonia.  
62-96.
Tudge et al. made 180 observations of each child in the survey and  
tabulated to what extend they were involved in play, lessons, and  
work. (p. 87): 'Out data made clear that even if the cross city  
differences in values and beliefs did not fall into a consistent  
pattern, the same cannot be said of social class. In terms of both  
values and beliefs the results were precisely as predicted.'
Interestingly, they found that children in Korea were most involved  
in play (122/180 observations) and kids in Oninsk the least  
(86/180). But they find FAR more academic play in middle class kids  
in Korea than working class kids (nearly three times as much).
All in all, exactly what Vygotsky would have predicted. There is a  
profound, inner link between imaginative play and schoolwork, that  
is, compulsory behavior patterned according to abstract rules.
That profound inner link is NOT available through rote work and  
empty verbalism, which despite a superficially "scientist" dressing  
is actually based on the exercise of the lower psychogical  
functions. Neither is it available through giving one's involuntary  
attention span a workout or running around meaninglessly through the  
"adventure time" provided by popular media.
(I think THIS is the REAL way in which capitalism insinuates itself  
into the educational system; and THAT is why capitalist educational  
ideologues like Thorndike have never accepted the Vygotskyan  
distinction between lower and higher psychological functions.)
That profound inner link is always and ineluctably bound up with the  
meaningful word. I think the point about Mike's problem (and the  
excellent paper by Sfard he sent around after it) concerning the  
multiplication of two negative numbers or a negative and a positive  
is that there really IS a link between written language, grammar,  
and mathematical ability.
"It does not happen that arithmetic develops certain functions in  
isolation and independently and written speech develops others. Each  
different subject has in part a common psychological basis. The  
seizure of conscious awareness and mastery is in the forefront of  
development in the same way for the learning of grammar as for that  
of written speech. We find it in the learning of arithmetic as well  
as at the centre of attention n the learning of scientific concepts.  
Abstract thinking of the child develops in all of his lessons and  
his development does not decompose itself in fact into separate  
courses corresponding to diverse study materials which are divided  
up as in school learning." (Pensiero e linguaggio, trans. by L.  
Meccaci, p. 266)
So it passes by way of what Vygotsky delightfully calls "scientific  
imagination". That this expression strikes us as oxymoronic is yet  
more testimony to the poverty of our science and the paucity of our  
imagination, or at least the dysfunctionality of the non-Confucian  
education that supplied our understanding of both.
"Voluntary attention and logical memory, abstract thinking and  
scientific imagination develop each other, thanks to a basis which  
is common to all of the higher psychological functions into a unique  
complex process; the common basis of all of these higher  
psychological functions, whose development constitutes the principal  
neoformation of the school age, is the seizure of conscious  
awareness and mastery." (p. 268).
Conscious awareness and mastery! Not the sort of thing you want the  
sons and daughters of the working classes playing with, is it?
David Kellogg
Seoul National University of Education





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