Edwards and Potter – p. 77-177
I am a “light weight” too when it comes to these
readings. I am finding it very slow
going. I read and reread and am still
not sure I can articulate much of an understanding of what I read! The
activities we do in class – last week with the Graffiti Wall, last night with
the drawing of how cognitivists and discursive psychology view particular
concepts, and the practical examples (Paula Dean, various snippets of
conversation) that we discuss are really helpful in grounding all of the
theoretical reading. I am hoping more
will come clear when we meet for class on Wednesday.
I am understanding that DP sees “memories” as variable
constructions based on the context in which they are communicated. This makes sense to me when I reflect on conversations
I have had with students over the years about books they were reading or
concepts we have discussed. What students are able to relay in a “conference”
about a book is different than what they say when they are in a more formalized
assessment situation. This is true for me as well. What I ‘remember’ independently about what I
have read is very different from what I am able to construct in conversation
with others.
“Attribution theory is designed to describe and account for
how ordinary people make causal sense of events, and especially of people’s
actions.” When I read this, I was
thinking about our conversations about ‘learning style’ or explaining someone’s
actions by saying “that’s just the way they are”. I have, on more than one occasion, been
irritated by the later explanation – in both professional and personal
situations. This reminds me of an
earlier conversation you and I had (via blogging) about the idea of learning
disability (in reading). It has been my
experience that once that label is applied, it becomes the explanation for why
a student can’t read … “that’s just the
way he is!” That “attribution” becomes a
self-fulfilling prophesy of sorts – we change our instruction almost to ensure
the student doesn’t learn to read (we limit his opportunities in text, we think
that skills based and phonics instruction is the way this student has to be
taught, we stop expecting that the child WILL learn to read) because his label
explains why he has difficulty with reading. An alternative interpretation would be to
think the problem lies in the interaction between the student and
teachers. This interpretation gives hope
that the situation could change and that the “learning disability” is not a
FIXED condition. I think DP could give
hope to this sort of situation … if we attributed the difficulty in learning to
some glitch in the interaction and not a glitch residing inside the child. It seems to me that labels of these sorts
serve as “externalizing devices” … “ways of accomplishing versions,
categorizations and explanations such that they appear as simple, uninterpreted
and unmotivated descriptions” (p. 90). This is one of the things that is so appealing
to me about Reading Recovery. When
Marie Clay talks about selection of students for RR, she says there are only
two conditions…1) that the student be the lowest in their cohort of students in
terms of achievement on The Observation Survey of Early Literacy Achievement
and 2) that the student be participating in the core reading instruction in the
classroom. Children are not excluded
from participation in RR due to low IQ, high absenteeism, or (and I love this
one) “someone else’s classification of the child as learning disabled.” To Clay, it didn’t matter the label or the
number … kids need to learn to read regardless. She attributed a difficulty in literacy
achievement for children to inappropriate teaching. This is encouraging to me, as it implies that
something can be done. Teaching can be
adjusted to meet the child wherever he/she is. The concluding sentences of Chapter 4 seem
appropriate here … “As soon as we begin to study situated discourse, abstracted
models of rational thought soon diminish in explanatory significance, as we
discover how versions, explanations and inferences are constructed, implied and
embedded in talk. It is in the
accomplishment of social actions, rather than the display of underlying
cognitive representations, that we find orderliness in discourse (p. 102).
When reading chapter 5, I thought a lot about how we
construct and deconstruct notions of “truth” in Reading Recovery training. When we are having ‘behind the glass’
conversations, teachers talk about what they are noticing or what they believe
about a child as he/she is engaging with literacy tasks. A teacher might say something like, “He is
not fluent as he reads”. We would watch
and listen to his reading and look for “evidence” to support the
assertion. Sometimes, the looking will
refine the assertion … “He is not fluent when he reads narrative sections of
text but does well in the dialogue section of text” … or “He is not fluent because
he keeps stopping to talk to the teacher about what he iis reading.” Our constructions of tentative “truth” are
based on our collective observations of the live lesson. One of the major tenants of RR is that the
teacher remains “tentative and flexible” in her theories about the child and is
always looking for different avenues to pursue.
This seems to fit too with DP.
There is no absolute TRUTH.
Before class on Monday, I had finished the book. I read ahead this weekend so I could spend
more time today on the blog post. When
we were reading the PD deposition, and we came to the part about the “dancing
gun”….I was reminded of pages 114 and 115 when the authors talk about the use
of “idiomatic expressions” and the use of figurative language in “inauspicious
environments”. This may also connect to
some of the story telling she did when being interviewed by Matt Lauer. I never really considered how these elements
of language could be deployed to serve a particular function. It is so interesting to me that they tend to
occur at predictable times and that “they have a robustness that makes them
hard to challenge with specific facts or information” (p. 115).
In Chapter 6, I liked the discussion of the conversation
between Margaret Thatcher and Brian Walden.
I would like to talk about this with my blogging partner on Thursday.
I felt relieved when I reached Chapter 7. I wondered about the chapter placement in the
book – the entire book might have made more sense to me if this chapter would
have been the first, rather than the last.
I particularly liked the recap of fact construction devices on pages 160
– 163. I see this playing out in
conversations with people. I think we
aren’t aware of using these “devices” most of the time. Sometimes I think people are intentionally
manipulative and are jockeying for position, but most of the time I think these
“devices” are employed without us really knowing what we are doing. As I reread my highlights from this section,
I was reminded of the comments Natalia made about us being hard wired to have
our needs met and that we do what we have to in order to survive. I agree with her comments…
This is only somewhat related, but your post reminds me of the time I was talking with my friend who has a son with Down's syndrome. My friend was telling me how it had been considered "a fact" that people with Down's have quite a short life expectancy. I remember hearing this myself. Well, as it turns out, this is because in the past they were sent to homes or institutions. When they stay out in the public eye and with families and are autonomous - guess what? Their life expectancy is just as long as anyone else's (or at least not as short as previously "claimed.") To me this just shows that even "scientific facts" about biological "truths" are socially constructed and situated in context. It was a powerful "a ha" moment for me when I had that conversation with him.
ReplyDelete"One of the major tenants of RR is that the teacher remains “tentative and flexible” in her theories about the child and is always looking for different avenues to pursue." I love this! Fits very well with a discursive view of the world.
"I never really considered how these elements of language could be deployed to serve a particular function." This is much of what we will do in DA this fall - look at how elements of language are deployed to serve particular functions. And I agree that we are usually not conscious of what we are "doing" - unless we are in advertising or politics, I suppose :)
Yes, I think this is what bothers me so much about the LD label in reading. As soon as it is applied, everyone changes what they do and treat the label and not the child!!! I think your example is absolutely related to my experiences with LD kids.
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