Hi Jennifer and colleagues,
Your points are very well crafted. You are so right that we need to
challenge our students regarding the paradigmatic tap roots of the
linguistic terms we use in education. Certainly, where I work, the
definitions are rooted in a very hegemonic, behavioristic, and
capitalistic perspective. NCLB challenges to contextualize the meaning
and significance of current educational terminology. Thanks for the
inspiration!
Cathrene
M. Cathrene Connery, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor of Bilingual & TESL Education
Central Washington University
>>> Jennifer Vadeboncoeur <vadebonc@interchange.ubc.ca> 2/14/2007 5:20
PM >>>
Hi Cathrene, thanks for your note. :)
Mike's comment is a "wake up" call: what I assume and the way I use
language to make sense of things is not necessarily the same as what
others assume and the way they use language. I am reminded of
discussions by Wertsch regarding the way that Vygotsky's ideas
challenge our common terms for things, and the need to add qualifiers
to signify a new or different meaning; situated cognition,
distributed cognition, assisted performance, situated learning. I am
constantly reminding my students, reminding myself as I do, that
common terms like learning, development, cognition, emotion,
knowledge, identity, are grounded in theoretical perspectives. So we
end up saying, "This is what I mean by cognition, not that
definition, this one." They get overwhelmed sometimes with the
different ways of conceptualizing these terms, me too, but I love the
idea that this "word play" is an avenue for thinking things
differently. I hope this is "true."
Best - jennifer
>Hi Jennifer and colleagues,
>Thanks for your eloquent definition of the term "social". I, too,
>embrace the multidimensional concept as being constituent of social,
>cultural, historical, mediated, semiotic, and embodied texts and
>practices.
>Cathrene
>
>M. Cathrene Connery, Ph.D.
>Assistant Professor of Bilingual & TESL Education
>Central Washington University
>
>>>> Jennifer Vadeboncoeur <vadebonc@interchange.ubc.ca> 2/13/2007
5:37
>PM >>>
>Mike!
>
>Yes, thanks for that query. In this piece we began with the physical
>and were writing/thinking through what other forms of "space" might
>look like. Space that is constituted by or produced in human
>activity, social practices, and discursive practices, for example,
>that would help us describe and explain our research.
>
>The concepts that are central to our work - social, cultural, and
>historical - are in my mind, though I have taken up and used "social
>practices" more than "cultural practices" or "historical practices,"
>perhaps out of force of habit. I see this tendency in Harvey,
>Lefebvre, and Soja's work - that is, to talk about the social moreso
>than the cultural, though in saying that, I pause, because Harvey, in
>particular, emphasizes the historical alongside the social production
>of space.
>
>So, when I read the term "social," as in "social construction of
>knowledge," I read it as a process that is at once social, cultural,
>and historical. I read it as mediated, semiotic, embodied. I
>appreciate your point; that others may not read it this way.
>
>Sociocultural, cultural historical, sociohistorical, cultural? How
>are other folks managing this?
>
>Best - jennifer
>
>
>>Hi Jennifer--
>>
>>For those who have not gotten the article, you can start at the
>following
>>url, then go to the journal and down on the right
>>hand side you will see the last article in the series. That is the
one
>on
>>spaces that Jennifer is referring to.
>>http://lchc.ucsd.edu/MCA/index.html
> >
> >Good luck hunting and reading!!
> >
> >Jennifer-- How come the term, culture, does not figure in your
brief
> >summary?
> >mike
> >
> >On 2/12/07, Jennifer Vadeboncoeur <vadebonc@interchange.ubc.ca>
>wrote:
>>>
>>>>Date: Fri, 9 Feb 2007 14:04:29 -0800
>>>>To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
>>>>From: Jennifer Vadeboncoeur <vadebonc@interchange.ubc.ca>
>>>>Subject: social spaces
>>>>Cc:
>>>>Bcc:
>>>>X-Attachments:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Dear XMCA Folks,
>>>>
>>>>Hope this note finds you well!
>>>>
>>>>On Monday, Mike attached the piece entitled, Hirst, E. &
>>>>Vadeboncoeur, J. A. (2006). Patrolling the borders of Otherness:
>>>>Dis/placed identity positions for teachers and students in
schooled
>>>>spaces. Mind, Culture, and Activity: An International Journal,
>>>>13(3), 203-225.
>>>>
>>>>I am mindful of busy schedules and not sure who may have gotten
the
>>>>chance to read it yet, but I thought I would throw out a a bit of
a
>>>>beginning piece and see if I can generate some discussion.
>Elizabeth
>>>>Hirst, at Griffith University in Brisbane, will contribute as she
> >>>can around her traveling schedule.
>>>>
>>>>As I think about this piece, two interests of ours were: an
>interest
>>>>in understanding social space, as distinct from material or
>physical
>>>>space; and an interest in exploring the intersection between
>>>>government - federal and state - policy and the lives of teachers
>>>>and students. For example, if we attempt to work beyond the "space
>>>>as container" metaphor, how do we describe, define, exemplify
>social
>>>>space? What constructs social space? How is it constituted? And
>from
>>>>a research perspective, what sorts of data would need to be
>gathered
>>>>to provide evidence of social space? Both theoretical and
>>> >methodological issues surface here and for the second area of
>>> >interest. In terms of links between policy and practice, how do
>we
>>> >map across policy initiatives and what occurs at the level of
the
>>>>school and/or the classroom? How do we link policy with the lives
>of
>>>>young people outside of schools?
>>>>
>>>>Just some thoughts here. As you think about this piece, what
stands
>>>>out for you?
>>>>
>>>>Best - jennifer
>>>>
>>>>[Eliz, please jump in when you can, and add to the above, vibes
for
>>> >safe travels!]
>
>--
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