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Lev Vygotsys Sociocultural Theory of Learning

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Title: Lev Vygotsys Sociocultural Theory of Learning


1
Lev Vygotsys Sociocultural Theory of
Learning
  • By Teresa Hankins

2
Brief History
  • His theoretical perspective was developing in a
    time of political turmoil in the soviet union and
    he was blacklisted by the Communist Govt. under
    the reign of Stalin for being pseudoscientific.
  • Not until 1956 (2 years after Stalins death) was
    Vygotskys work finally published.

3
Vygotsys key components to understanding learning
  • Cultural interaction
  • Language
  • Internalization
  • Ontogeny
  • Zone of Proximal Development

4
Culture differs for each individual but is
equally important.
5
Culturally Mediated
  • People live in an environment transformed by the
    artifacts of prior generations, extending back to
    the beginning of the species. Vygotsky,
  • Culture is considered a unique medium of humans
    existence because humans live in a double
    world, simultaneously natural and artificial.



  • Luria, 1928, ,pp. 91
  • Vygotsky believed that this is what made humans
    uniquely different from other animals.

6
Today we see that some animals do have what is
considered a culture.
Japanese macaques
7
Culture continued
  • Culture is where language and speech are derived
    for each individual.
  • Language has evolved over time to preserve
    information and make it available to later
    generations. (e.g. religion, science, and
    survival techniques.)

8
Impact of Language
  • From Birth, children interact with adults who
    socialize them into their culture their stock of
    meanings, their language, their conventions, and
    their way of doing things.
  • Language enables people to navigate through
    general thoughts and see relations between
    concepts.

9
Language continued
  • Speech enables children to navigate through
    thoughts and attain conclusions based on how
    weve learned to initially navigate.
  • Young children display this when they think
    outloud and engage in self-talk to navigate
    through their ideas.

10
Language continued
  • As the learner becomes more capable through
    experience, outloud thinking becomes self-speech,
    which is internal. This is considered internal
    dialogue that helps the learner work through
    complex ideas and he either will accept or deny
    them, based on whatever cultural precursors have
    been set in place.

11
Internalization
  • We become human through the internalization of
    culture Vygotsky

12
Internalization
  • When a child is first born, the culture is an
    independent entity from the child. As the child
    begins to process the culture, as part of his
    learning foundation, he internalizes his culture
    to build future knowledge.

13
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14
In other words
  • Culture is interiorized as mental activity, thus
    becoming internal to the child pp.493, 495

15
Zone of Proximal Development
  • The gap between a childs current level of
    development on his own, and the potential level
    of development with the help a teacher

16
ZPD 2 distinct levels
  • What the child can achieve alone
  • 2. The childs potential development with guidance

17
1. What the child can currently achieve
independently
  • This level is the most current within the zone
    and is determined by independent problem solving.
  • It is the first level of development to be
    directly influenced by the childs environmental
    and cultural components

18
2. The Childs potential development with
appropriate guidance
  • This level is based on what the child can achieve
    through the problem solving under the adult
    guidance.
  • The idea of more capable peers is now integrated
    into this theory but Vygotsky would disagree

19
Ontogeny
  • Vygotsky viewed ontogeny as a series of
    qualitative, dialectic transformations.
  • Meaning that higher mental functioning form in
    stages, each a complex process of disintegration
    and integration.

20
Dialectical Transformations
  • Learning is attained through fluid
    interactions between the learner and the
    environment. As a result of continuous feedback
    between learner and environment, knowledge is
    then improved, and thus it is transformed.

21
Process of Ontogeny
Promotes higher thought process and functioning
Provokes new variety of memories to be formed
Modified and altered perceptions formed
Various outcomes of interactions
Behavior Regulator
Produces approaches to various interactions
Speech
Language
Culture
22
Ontogeny
  • A clear indication of ontogeny is with the
    effects of formal schooling.
  • The consequences of formal schooling on cognitive
    development
  • Education provides the new tools of the
    intellect, but without contexts of use, these
    tools appear to rust and fall into disuse

23
Formal schooling
  • The medium of instruction is writing.
  • The materials, tasks, and goals are organized by
    a curriculum.

24
Formal School continued
  • So now, the environment within a school can be
    viewed as a distinct culture in itself where a
    whole new set of norms and expectations guide the
    learning process

25
Writing continued
  • Writing is visual, physical speech.

26
The impact of Constructivism can be seen in
  • Educational structure
  • Guides curriculum, and learning activities
  • Virtual Environments used as learning tools
  • Design of VE to effectively stimulate learning
  • Such as in Geography lessons
  • Behavior modification techniques
  • Has been helpful to develop self-regulation

27
Consider this
  • Culture is the source of the mind

28
?
  • How has your culture guided your development of
    thought processes?
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