Difference between pages "Elliott et al. (2009)" and "Cobb & Yackel (1996)"

From MathEd.net Wiki
(Difference between pages)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Removed images)
 
(Removed images)
Tag: Manual revert
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Title|Conceptualizing the Work of Leading Mathematical Tasks in Professional Development}}
{{Title|Constructivist, Emergent, and Sociocultural Perspectives in the Context of Developmental Research}}
__NOTOC__
__NOTOC__
* Authors: [[Rebekah Elliott]], [[Elham Kazemi]], [[Kristin Lesseig]], [[Judith Mumme]], [[Cathy Carroll]], and [[Megan Kelley-Petersen]]
* Authors: [[Paul Cobb]] and [[Erna Yackel]]
* Journal: [[Journal of Teacher Education]]
* Journal: [[Educational Psychologist]]
* Year: 2009
* Year: 1996
* Source: http://jte.sagepub.com/content/60/4/364.short
* Source: http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265


==Abstract==
==Abstract==
Filling the knowledge gap in the limited research on professional development leaders is an urgent issue if teacher learning is to be improved. This research and development project is studying how leaders learn to cultivate mathematically rich professional development environments. The authors adapted two frameworks from classroom-based research—sociomathematical norms and practices for orchestrating productive discussion—to support leaders' understanding of facilitation of mathematics professional development. In this article, the authors describe the use of these frameworks in their work and argue for a third framework—the mathematical knowledge for teaching. Based on the analysis of their work, they believe that mathematics professional development leaders need to cultivate particular sociomathematical norms for teacher explanation and employ practices for orchestrating discussions to achieve the purposeful development of teachers' specialized knowledge of mathematics for teaching.
Our overall intent is to clarify relations between the psychological constructivist, sociocultural, and emergent perspectives. We provide a grounding for the comparisons in the first part of the article by outlining an interpretive framework that we developed in the course of a classroom-based research project. At this level of classroom processes, the framework involves an emergent approach in which psychological constructivist analyses of individual activity are coordinated with interactionist analyses of classroom interactions and discourse. In the second part of the article, we describe an elaboration of the framework that locates classroom processes in school and societal contexts. The perspective taken at this level is broadly sociocultural and focuses on the influence of individuals' participation in culturally organized practices. In the third part of the article, we use the discussion of the framework as a backdrop against which to compare and contrast the three theoretical perspectives. We discuss how the emergent approach augments the psychological constructivist perspective by making it possible to locate analyses of individual students' constructive activities in social context. In addition, we consider the purposes for which the emergent and sociocultural perspectives might be particularly appropriate and observe that they together offer characterizations of individual students' activities, the classroom community, and broader communities of practice.


==Outline of Headings==
==Corrolary==
* The Leader's Role in Professional Development
* Frameworks for Leader Practice
** Social and Sociomathematical Norms
** Practices for Orchestrating Productive Mathematical Discussion
* The Leader Seminar Model
** Design Principles
** Video Case Curriculum
** Social and Sociomathematical Norms Framework
** Practices Framework
** Purposeful Progression of Activities
** Participants and Data Collection
** Seminar Data
** Case Leader PD Data
* Analysis
* Results and Discussion
** Leaders Respond Positively to Sociomathematical Norms and Practices for Orchestrating Discussions
*** Case leaders suggested that sharing should be a means to support learning
*** Leaders' ideas were tempered by tensions of working with adult learners on mathematics
*** Leaders see practices for sharing useful to support teacher learning
*** Leaders used practices differentially depending on familiarity of task
** Leaders Recognize the Importance of Purpose in PD
*** Specifying purpose requires negotiation of multiple factors
*** Leaders' purposes were underspecified to guide their moves in PD
** Implications and Evolving Frameworks for Leader Development Work
* Further Directions and Conclusion
 
==Cite==
;APA
;APA
: Elliott, R., Kazemi, E., Lesseig, K., Mumme, J., Carroll, C., & Kelley-Petersen, M. (2009). Conceptualizing the work of leading mathematical tasks in professional development. ''Journal of Teacher Education'', 60(4), 364–379. doi:10.1177/0022487109341150
: Cobb, P., & Yackel, E. (1996). Constructivist, emergent, and sociocultural perspectives in the context of developmental research. ''Educational Psychologist'', 31(3-4), 175–190. doi:10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265
;BibTeX
;BibTeX
<pre>
<pre>
@article{Elliott2009,
@article{Cobb1996a,
author = {Elliott, Rebekah and Kazemi, Elham and Lesseig, Kristin and Mumme, Judith and Carroll, Cathy and Kelley-Petersen, Megan},
author = {Cobb, Paul and Yackel, Erna},
doi = {10.1177/0022487109341150},
doi = {10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265},
journal = {Journal of Teacher Education},
journal = {Educational Psychologist},
number = {4},
number = {3-4},
pages = {364--379},
pages = {175--190},
title = {{Conceptualizing the work of leading mathematical tasks in professional development}},
title = {{Constructivist, emergent, and sociocultural perspectives in the context of developmental research}},
url = {http://jte.sagepub.com/content/60/4/364.short},
url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265},
volume = {60},
volume = {31},
year = {2009}
year = {1996}
}
}
</pre>
</pre>


[[Category:Journal Articles]]
[[Category:Journal Articles]]
[[Category:Journal of Teacher Education]]
[[Category:Educational Psychologist]]
[[Category:2009]]
[[Category:1996]]
[[Category:Teacher Knowledge]]
[[Category:Learning Sciences]]
[[Category:Professional Development]]

Revision as of 20:33, 29 May 2021

Constructivist, Emergent, and Sociocultural Perspectives in the Context of Developmental Research

Abstract

Our overall intent is to clarify relations between the psychological constructivist, sociocultural, and emergent perspectives. We provide a grounding for the comparisons in the first part of the article by outlining an interpretive framework that we developed in the course of a classroom-based research project. At this level of classroom processes, the framework involves an emergent approach in which psychological constructivist analyses of individual activity are coordinated with interactionist analyses of classroom interactions and discourse. In the second part of the article, we describe an elaboration of the framework that locates classroom processes in school and societal contexts. The perspective taken at this level is broadly sociocultural and focuses on the influence of individuals' participation in culturally organized practices. In the third part of the article, we use the discussion of the framework as a backdrop against which to compare and contrast the three theoretical perspectives. We discuss how the emergent approach augments the psychological constructivist perspective by making it possible to locate analyses of individual students' constructive activities in social context. In addition, we consider the purposes for which the emergent and sociocultural perspectives might be particularly appropriate and observe that they together offer characterizations of individual students' activities, the classroom community, and broader communities of practice.

Corrolary

APA
Cobb, P., & Yackel, E. (1996). Constructivist, emergent, and sociocultural perspectives in the context of developmental research. Educational Psychologist, 31(3-4), 175–190. doi:10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265
BibTeX
@article{Cobb1996a,
author = {Cobb, Paul and Yackel, Erna},
doi = {10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265},
journal = {Educational Psychologist},
number = {3-4},
pages = {175--190},
title = {{Constructivist, emergent, and sociocultural perspectives in the context of developmental research}},
url = {http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00461520.1996.9653265},
volume = {31},
year = {1996}
}