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Re: [xmca] Given Tablets But No Teachers, Ethiopian Kids Teach Themselves



I am troubled by the question, Mike, because so much is swinging on interpretation of words which apparently signal disputes over entire concrete concepts (theories of learning) which lie out of sight behind the question.

Insofar as we confine ourselves to "the temporal scale of events that involve teaching/learning" we put out of sight the developmental life course of a person, so an answer I might give is subject to misinterpretation, because I would hold that one of the features of what we call development is that it is meaningful only within the temporal context of a person's development into a citizen. That does not negate the irreducible fact, however, that, like every other process, it takes place "minute by minute," "event by event" or "situation by situation."

So with those qualifications, if we have just been through an episode with a young child, in the course of struggling with a particularly stubborn learning difficulty, and we say: "I think we made a development there," what we mean is that the child did something under our stimulus which he could not have done without it, but we have reason to believe that henceforth he will be able to do it without our assistance, that is, outside the classroom context which made it possible. I guess there are moments, aren't there, when you know that, without waiting to see what the child is like the next day. Sometimes I look back onmy own life and can see that I made a development on a certain day, but I don't think I knew it then.

Andy

mike cole wrote:
Andy-- I am concerned, among other things, with the question of whether and under what conditions it is useful to make a distinction between learning and development and in particular whether, at the temporal scale of events that involve teaching/learning a form of change those adopting a Vygotskian view would designate as development is possible.

If not, then I suggest that the notion of zone of proximal development is a non-starter. Criticizing those who mistake a zone of proximal development from a zone of proximal learning seems somehow irrelevant unless development can be said to occur in teaching/learning interactions.

mike


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