COLLABORATIVE PROBLEM- SOLVING AND ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT Lala Mamedov KA702.
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Transcript of COLLABORATIVE PROBLEM- SOLVING AND ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT Lala Mamedov KA702.
COLLABORATIVE PROBLEM-SOLVING AND ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT Lala MamedovKA702
Overview
Lev Vygotsky and ZPD Concept introduction Examples Scaffolding
ZPD in literature Institutional creativity Cognitive effects of and with computer technology Peer-to-peer learning for social transformation Symmetrical ZPD
Expanding ZPD to peer-to-peer collaboration Swarming Knowledge co-creation
Summary References
About Lev Vygotsky
Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934): Russian social-constructivist psychologist
Main Concepts Higher and lower mental functions Cognitive-Mediation Theory Zone of proximal development (ZPD)
Zone of proximal development Definition: ‘…the distance between the actual
developmental level as determined through independent problem solving and the level of potential development as determined through problem solving under adult guidance or in collaboration with more capable peers’ (Vygotsky, 1978, p. 86)
Zone of Proximal Development describes the human development as a s socially mediated activity.
Cognitive apprenticeship Examples
Birdhouses and mom reading Two 8 yr old pupils at the same actual level of knowledge:
different speed of assisted problem-solving: different ZPDs
There is no single point at which the child had developed the skill but didn’t have it before.
Zone of Proximal Development
ZPD: Summary
Development level is not a point but a range
From complete mastery of lower level skills and knowledge to the upper limit
Actual – potential: in between is present Zone is dynamic Each knowledge domain has its own zone Varies per person Society and adult cooperate in creating
tools for development: More Capable Peer or Adult
Intermental to intramental
Scaffolding
Not Vygotsky’s term but his concept: dynamic, adaptive support and adult mediation of child’s learning
Term introduced by Jerome Bruner: "vicarious consciousness"
Support just above the level of construction Has to be within ZPD Vygotsky: Social pretend play provided
scaffolding Co-construction of skills
ZPD in literature: 1
Hasse, Institutional creativity (2001) The two students - Alexander and Anni -
are not on the same level of ZPD. Different contexts and different
expectations Role of the teacher: not just master the
textbook, but point the pathways for development (Fielding model!)
Hasse suggests that the teacher also operates within the ZPD and has own the zone of actual and a potential development
ZPD in literature: 2
Salomon , Cognitive Effects With and Of Computer Technology (1990)
Effects of technology: cognitive residue Effects with technology: can now do more System child+adult more intelligent that
each separately: computer as a more capable peer or adult
But can the child grow cognitively? Yes, is there is a mindful engagement: Stretching abilities boundaries (=scaffolding) Skills internalization (intermental to intramental)
ZPD in literature: 3
Sawchuk, Informal Learning as a Speech-exchange System: Implications for Knowledge Production, Power and Social Transformation (2003)
More capable peer is not needed: two novices can create own ZPD
"Indeed, by demonstrating how novices can themselves collectively construct a ZPD in order to increase individual and collective knowledgeability we engage in a process of unsettling taken-for-granted themes of power, control, and knowledge." (304)
ZPD in literature: 4
Fernandez et al, Re-conceptualizing "Scaffolding" and the Zone of Proximal Development in the Context of Symmetrical Collaborative Learning (2001)
a) Disputational talk b) Cumulative talk c) Exploratory talk “ One way of talking (disputational talk) restricts the
group's ZPD while another (exploratory talk) expands it. This group version of the ZPD is no longer the product of a teacher's conscious intention. It is better understood as a symmetrical version of the concept of the Intermental Development Zone, in which language is used in a dynamic and dialogical way to maintain and develop a shared context."
ZPD and collaborative problem-solving Why is ZPD applicable?
Vygotsky used this with child-adult dyad But can also be applied to a more capable
peer In collaborative problem resolution, each
participant comes in with different levels of knowledge and experience
Problem-solving is a collaboration where each participant is a “more capable other”
“Swarming”
Co-creation of knowledge through storytelling Learning happens in the process of mastering
a new skill; collaborative problem-solving is mastering of a challenge
Tacit to explicit knowledge In collaboration, ZPD of each participant
varies – and the person with the greater knowledge is not necessarily the one who would come up with the correct answer – has to be within the ZPD for the person
Maybe if it is in the “already mastered” phase, people are less likely to make new connections – they need to stretch
Collaborative problem-solving
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“Reference scenarios can provide a resource: a similar problem, an already-worked-out interpretation, or a possible solution arrived at in an analogous case. As precedents enclosed in stories, scenarios are potentially relevant to all domains.” (Knorr-Cetina, 1999)
Conclusion
Concept of Zone of Proximal Development can be applied not only to hierarchical learning, but also to symmetric learning
Group problem-resolution is a type of collaborative learning, or team sense-making
Knowledge is co-constructed through narrative
Tacit knowledge is converted into explicit Next step: investigate models of group
problem-solving
Questions and Discussion
References Daniels, H. (1996). An introduction to Vygotsky. London. New York: Routledge. Fernandez, M., Wegerif, R., Mercer, N., & Rojas-Drummond, S. (2001). Re-conceptualizing "scaffolding"and the
zone of proximal development in the context of symmetrical collaborative learning. Journal of Classroom Interaction, 36(2)-37(1), 40-54.
Hasse, C. (2001). Institutional Creativity: The Relational Zone of Proximal Development. Culture & Psychology, 7(2), 199-221.
Knorr-Cetina, K. (1999). Epistemic cultures : how the sciences make knowledge. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Martin, C., & Bernadette, H. (1998). Vygotsky and learning. Education Libraries Journal, 41(3), 17. Rogoff, B., & Wertsch, J. V. (1984). Children's learning in the "zone of proximal development". San Francisco:
Jossey-Bass. Salomon, G. (1990). Cognitive Effects With and Of Computer Technology. Communication Research, 17(1), 26-44. Sawchuk, P. H. (2003). Informal Learning as a Speech-exchange System: Implications for Knowledge Production,
Power and Social Transformation. Discourse & Society, 14(3), 291-307. Vygotskii, L. S., & Cole, M. (1978). Mind in society : the development of higher psychological processes.
Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Vygotskii, L. S., & Rieber, R. W. (1997). The history of the development of higher mental functions. New York;
London: Plenum.
Wentzel, K. R., & Watkins, D. E. (2002). Peer Relationships and Collaborative Learning as Contexts for Academic Enablers. The School Psychology Review [H.W. Wilson - EDUC], 31(3), 366.