Help with a question
Recently Andy asked a question about clarification of the concept of
"central lines of development.
I have been reading the article by Mike Cole and Natalia Gajdamaschko and
there is a section with the heading
"Heterogeneity of 'Leading' Activity in the Course of a Single Game Episode"
Tmike and Natalia suggest there were several "leading" activities
POTENTIALLY present, each associated with differentage periods. Leading
activities such as:
- need to be loved and accepted
- play
- learning
- peer interaction
- work
My question is if these leading activities may not be age specific. Each of
us may be centrally motivated by a particular leading activity which
fluctuates from moment to moment in activity. In the example in the article
an undergraduate, Jill Silverstein, was writing field notes of the fifth
dimension activity. Mike and Natalia when interpreting the fieldnotes
suggest Jill initially had a central motive of affiliation while play was
the leading activity for the children. There was a confusion about the
rules of the game and the adult entered into the game and learning at that
moment became a central motive.
There were many transitions in motives during the game and Mike and
Natalia summed up this section by stating,
"As this example makes clear, not only are the girls able to be a "head
taller" but a "head shorter" in the course of a single stretch of a joint
game play mediated by the computer game and each other" [p.275]
This statement points to notions of volition [agency] which are fluid and
interchangeable when contained within supportive contexts [interweaving]
How does this observation fit with the notion of a CENTRAL line of
development? Is it possible that there is more heterogeneity in the lines of
development than implied in the concept "central"? Could the concept of
central lines of development be describing historical forms of
development which develop in particular settings when 5 year olds enter
school environments?
I may still be confused and misinterpreting Mike and Natalia's position but
I am trying to understand if some of the more basic leading activities [such
as affiliation] remain central WHEN THREATENED but become implicit and taken
for granted when the person is secure and contained. If there is some merit
to this position then issues of security and attachment needs may recede
into the background and other leading activities come to the foreground when
basic attachment needs are met. However when there is a perceived threat
to basic security needs then earlier leading activities or motives also
return at any age.
Larry
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