Title: Dialogic Education and Technology
1Rupert Wegerif University of Exeter
Dialogic Education and Technology expanding the
space of learning
Dialogic Education and Technology Expanding the
Space of Learning
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3Society
Technology
Pedagogical theory
4Dialogic
5Two metaphors of space
- For Aristotle everything has one proper place a
thing cannot be in two places and and two things
can not occupy one place. Ergo AA A ? B. - But into what space is the internet expanding?
-
- Where is the proper place of my web page?
-
-
6- The expansion of cyberspace challenges the
principle of identity so what do we put in its
place? -
7Identity (or AA A? B)
(OTHER) (B)
(SELF) (A)
OTHER
But what is the unthought in this picture?
8Constitutive difference
Meaning starts with the act of drawing a boundary
-differentiating Figure from Ground (a relation
2 perspectives)
9Abgrund or space of possibility
The precondition of meaning a projected
infinite potential for meaning
10Ontology of difference
(OTHER) (B)
(SELF) (A)
OTHER
X
Je suis un autre (Rimbaud)
(A ? A A All )
Identity as always open and overflowing towards
the other
11Philosophical note Why this is dialogic and not
dialectic
- Hegels dialectic begins with Being (the Whole)
and moves through differences to a more complex
and internally integrated Being (the Absolute
Notion). Hence identity is assumed and we are
dealing with difference within identity.
Dialectical conflicts end in synthesis -
teleological - Dialogic begins with difference and never escapes
difference. The system is unbounded there is no
Being not even Abgrund - only difference
12So where are we? And where is my Avatar?
- The ancient Greeks did not know the most
important thing about themselves that they were
ancient Greeks Bakhtin - Situatedness is a construction implying its
other all we have is difference within an
absent whole - nowthen
- herethere
- selfother
- situatedunsituated
- So how can we understand this?
13Easy switch the founding metaphor from space to
dialogue
- Meaning is like an electric spark that occurs
only when two different terminals are hooked
together (Volosinov).
14Dialogic
- Wertsch when a speaker produces an utterance at
least two voices can be heard simultaneously
(Wertsch, 1991, p13). - Dialogic consists of the interanimation or
inter-illumination of voices - Bakhtin The text lives only by coming into
contact with another text. Only at the point of
this contact between texts does a light flash
(SG p 162) - Bakhtin There is neither a first nor a last
word and there are no limits to the dialogic
context Even past meanings can never be
stable (SG p 170)
15The dialogic principle
Dialogic holding more than one incomensurately
different perspective together in tension at
once.
16Monologic versus dialogic
- Monologic metaphor of physical space
- one true representation or perspective
- thinking as the reduction of apparent difference
to identity. - Dialogic metaphor of dialogue
- meaning presupposes difference
- thinking as play of perspectives
- in place of reduction unlimited creativity
17Dialogic space
- Dialogos reason (logos) through and across
(dia) difference. - Dialogic space is shared meaning space
characterised by lack of certainty and an
inescapable multiplicity of perspectives - . i.e. the space into which the internet
expands while at the same tie constructing that
space
18Subject-Tool-Object triangle
19Self-Other-Sign triangle
20Theses on mediation
- Mediation by an other (and by Otherness in
general) is required for meaning - Relationship is not similar to mediation by
things - We learn first and foremost by taking the
perspective of the specific other (and through
this the general Other) - Relationship precedes and excedes the use of
tools - The quality of the relationship is what counts in
education more than the quality of the tools
21Dialogic and learning to think
- Hobson argues that an individual sense of
self-awareness and an ability to think creatively
are intgernalized from the creative
interanimation of perspectives that occurs in
dialogues between Mother and child (Hobson,
1998). These dialogues, beginning with peek-a-boo
games in the cradle, open up what he calls
mental space, a space of possibilities through
which things become thinkable for the first time.
22Phylogenesis of creativity
- Through studies of apes and humans Tomasello
claims that consciousness originates in - a species-unique motivation to share emotions,
experience, and activities with other persons - Which he refers to as dialogic and claims is
more fundamental than language or tool use. - Tomasello et al 2004
23Pedagogy
24Vygotskian theory
- 'all that is internal in the higher mental
functions was at one time external' (Vygotsky,
1991, p36). - Words and forms of social interaction are
internalised or appropriated as cognitive tools - Thinking is a way of using words embedded in a
social practice - It follows that learning to reason is essentially
induction into a social practice involving the
internalisation of language as a tool for
thinking - (See Wegerif, Mercer and Dawes, 1999, From
Social Interaction to Individual Reasoning) -
25Change around B12
Pre
Post
26Talk and reasoning
- Several studies of teaching Exploratory Talk in
the UK and also in Mexico - working with Prof
Silvia Rojas Drummond of UNAM - have found
various correlations - Increased use of explicit reasoning terms around
reasoning tests - Improved group solving of reasoning test problems
- Statistically significant gains in individual
reasoning test scores
27BUT
- The beauty of the experimental design was that
it enabled not only quantitative correlations but
also qualitative analysis of the talk of children
solving reasoning tests. - So how did they do it? We argued that they did
it by using language as a tool for thinking but
in the end I found this unconvincing - The tools worked by creating a dialogic space in
which new perspectives emerged uncaused
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31To re-iterate
- When researching groups of children solving
reasoning test problems together it was found
that the key to success was the children learning
to listen and to change their minds. This
suggests a movement into dialogue towards
identification with the space of dialogue or
dialogue as an end in itself.
32Dialogic education
- Takes Vygotsky further by looking not only at the
internalisation of tools but the
internalisation of dialogic space. - It is education for dialogue as well as education
through dialogue. - Teaching thinking is induction into dialogue as
an end in itself. - Dialogue as an end in itself is the primary
thinking skill from which other skills follow
such as - creativity
- learning to learning
- listening to others
- critical reflection
33Images and exemplars
- Thinking as computation
- e.g formal logic, cognitive structures
- Thinking as situated tool use
- e.g abacus use
- (Cole and Derry, 2005)
- Thinking as shared inquiry
- e.g Bakhtin, Dewey, Lipman
34The transactional It excludes assertions of
fixity and attempts to impose them. It installs
openness and flexibility in the very process of
knowing. It treats knowl- edge as itself
inquiryas a goal within inquiry, not as a
terminus outside or beyond inquiry. Dewey and
Bentley 1947, p 97
BACK TO DEWEY
CoP
Unsituated Central Processor
Cutural tools
Situated social practices
Forms of life
Activity systems
35The core skill of reflection
- An active persistent and careful consideration
of any belief or supposed form of knowledge in
the light of the grounds that support it and the
further conclusion to which it tends. (Dewey,
1910)
I would augment this with an idea of the creative
space of emergence that opens up in a dialogue, a
space which can be more or less dialogic, more or
less open to the other and to the new (Wegerif,
2005, Reason and Creativity in Classroom
Dialogues)
36 Trajectory of identity
- Perhaps the greatest of all pedagogical
fallacies is the notion that a person learns only
the particular thing he is studying. Collateral
learning in the way of formation of enduring
attitudes, of likes and dislikes may be and often
is much more important than the spelling lesson
or lesson in geography or history that is
learned. The most important attitude that can be
formed is the desire to go on learning. (Dewey
1938, p29).
37Habits of thinking
- careful, alert, and thorough habits of
thinking. (Dewey 1933 p56). - In between the skill of reflection in the
moment and the longer term project of a
reflective identity as a learner and thinker
there are good intellectual habits, ingrained
semi-automatic responses such as questioning and
comparing.
38Re-cap on teaching thinking
- Deweys focus on the boundary led him to see
thinking as transactive inquiry. This stimulates
a dialogic theoretical framework for the
practical business of teaching thinking learning
to think as a trajectory of identity towards
identification with the reflective space of
dialogue supported by environments, habits and
skills.
39Implications for practice
- Promote pauses not just explicit reasoning
- Augment focus on talking with focus on active
listening - Augment construction of knowledge with
deconstruction of knowledge - Maintain awareness of context, situatedness
limitedness which is the awareness of the
unbounded potential
40- Development into dialogue is a kind of oxymoron
but an illuminating one. - It is learning as a trajectory of identity but
also a trajectory away from identification with
things (self, group etc) and towards
identification with non-identity ie with the
multiple and uncertain space of dialogue. -
41Negative Capability
- I had not a dispute but a disquisition, with
Dilke on various subjects several things
dove-tailed in my mind, and at once it struck me
what quality went to form a Man of Achievement,
especially in Literature, and which Shakespeare
possessed so enormously - I mean Negative
Capability, that is, when a man is capable of
being in uncertainties, mysteries, doubts,
without any irritable reaching after fact and
reason
(Sunday 21 Dec. 1817 Hampstead.)
42Educational technology
43Role of tools and technology
Not direct mediation of cognition as in the idea
of mindtools but opening, deepening, widening,
resourcing a space e.g words and ground rules to
open space of reflection, also to abstract,
consolidate and build on E.G Ong face to face
dialogue limited in space and time - writing and
social practices around reading and writing lead
to the development of an inner space of
reflection now with Blogs and Vlogs does this
inner space of possibility become a shared
space? Quality of thinking is seen in move from
dialogue with specific others to dialogue with
the general Other the Superaddressee or witness
44Teaching thinking
- Open dialogic spaces
- build agora in Athens
- prompt the kids to talk together when engaged in
a game - Deepen dialogic space
- give a topic more time for reflection using
marker - objectify dialogue as provisional artefact
- Widen dialogic space
- let women and slaves talk in the agora
- design for multiple voices
- Resource dialogic spaces
- E.g role play and staging
- E.g role play and staging
- tools as voices not voices as tools
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47Coding
48What sparks Aha moments?
- Analysis of the argument maps suggests that new
perspectives are emerging after open questions
and/or disagreements - This co-occurrence will be investigated using
critical event recall interviews in conjunction
with the playback facility of the system.
49Society
Technology
Pedagogical theory
50Thank you! www.rupertwegerif.name Contains
recent papers and draft chapters of Dialogic
Education and Technology r.b.wegerif_at_exeter.ac.uk