Download - Developing Learning Communities
Developing Learning
CommunitiesLanguage and Learning Style
Chapter Seven
Characteristics of a Learning Community
It is organized for activity.
Everyone in the school participates in this activity-oriented environment.
There is a sense that everyone belongs.
Rationale for Learning Community Classrooms
Need to prepare students to be citizens of a democracyThrough learning to negotiate
differences in the context of a common curriculum
Through learning citizenship by practicing democracy
Old methods with new names:Dialogue (Plato)Discovery learning (Abelard)Critical pedagogy, feminist pedagogy,
collaborative learning (Comenius)
What is new:
That these should exist at the same time and be used by both children and adults
Pedagogies: Old and New
Traditional roles of students and adults are expanded Teacher as “teller” is expanded to
teacher as guide, coach, cheerleader. Other adults assume teaching and
learning roles. Students may be “teachers” as well as
learners.
Roles: Old and New
Disciplinary knowledge serves a dual role:Sometimes it is learned as an end in
itself.Sometimes it serves as a means to
another end, e.g., problem-solving or discovering a new way to see and understand the world.
Place of Content Knowledge: Old and New
There is still a use for paper and pencil testing, standardized or teacher-written.
General use for such tests is diagnostic.
Alternative forms of assessment also play a part:
Peer evaluationPortfoliosGroup testsSelf-evaluation
Assessment: Old and New
Perspectives on Language Acquisition
Language is what makes us human. It is the primary means for socializing us into our families and social groups, and through them, acquiring a cultural identity.
The Family is the First Institution
Introduces us to language
Structures the child’s environment
Gives labels to roles such as Mommy, teacher, priest, extending roles into the wider community
Language objectifies, interprets, and justifies reality for the child.
Language brings the meanings and values of the wider community onto the small state of the immediate family.
Institutional Aspects of Language in the Family
Language has several characteristics in common with other social institutions:It is external.
It is objective.
It has the power of moral authority.
It is historical.
Perspectives on Language Variation
All language sounds have symbolic meaning.
Within any language, however, the meaning of elements may differ widely:VocabularyPronunciationSyntax (grammatical structure)Semantics (the meaning of words)
Verbal Communication
Accents: differ from standard language only in pronunciation
Dialects: differ from standard language in pronunciation, word usage, and syntaxBlack English (ebonics)Rural (or Mountain) EnglishStandard English
Continued…
Black English (ebonics, African American Language [AAL])
Spoken primarily (though not exclusively) by urban African Americans
Derived in part from the languages of west Africa
Ability to code switch (move back and forth from ebonics to standard English) is often a matter of social class
Rural (or Mountain) English
Spoken primarily in Appalachia
Derived from the language of early English settlers in the area
May be the “purest” English spoken in the United States
Has been preserved, in part, because of isolation of mountain people
Standard English
Is also a dialect of English, although it is the dialect usually deemed most “correct”
Is the language of education, commerce, and the arts
May vary from community to community, and from country to country
Bidialectism: the abililty to speak two (or more) dialects and to switch easily between or among them
Sign Language: a non-verbal language of signs spoken by the deaf
Serves instead of a spoken language
American Sign Language (ASL) is considered an “official” language
Nonverbal CommunicationUsed by both hearing and hearing-impaired
individuals
Accounts for 50 to 90 percent of the messages we send and receive
It has several functions:Conveys messagesCan augment verbal communicationCan contradict verbal communicationCan replace verbal communication
Three aspects of nonverbal communication:
Proxemics: sometimes called “social space”; refers to the “normal” distance considered appropriate between two people speaking
Kinesics: body language, e.g., gestures, facial expressions, eye contact
Paralanguage: vocalizations that are not words, e.g., sighs, laughter, crying
Culture, Language, and Learning Style
These three are inextricably intertwined:Language shapes and is shaped by
culture.Culture shapes and is shaped by
language.Learning style originates and accounts for
variations in patterns of learning, and is shaped by both language and culture.
Relation of Language to Culture
Language determines vocabulary, which sets the “right” meaning of words and of cultural ideas.
Language plays a critical role in the maintenance of subgroups within a larger culture.
Language reflects the thought processes of a culture.
Relation of Learning Style to Culture
Learning style is developed in the context of what we attend to (perception) and how we attend to it—culturally shaped adaptations to both the physical and the social environment.
Thus, particular learning styles are often associated with particular cultural groups.
Components of Learning Style
Field dependence: individual perceives globally or holistically; orientation is social; is good at observation
Field independence: individual perceives discrete parts; is good at abstract thought; tends to be individualistic; prefers working alone
Continued…
Additional Components of Learning StylePreferred sensory mode for learning,
e.g., sight, sound, smell, touch, taste, movement
Reponse to immediate environmentEmotionalitySocial preferencesCognitive-psychological orientation
Origins of Learning Style
Still a matter of conjecture
Appear to be a combination ofBiological factorsPsychological factorsSociocultural factors
Multiple Intelligences
The idea, based on brain research and proposed by Howard Gardner, that human beings not only have preferred learning styles, but also preferred ways of expressing intellectual ability, and thus, of thinking
Continued…
Seven kinds of intelligence:
Visual/spatialVerbal/linguisticLogical/mathematicalBodily/kinestheticMusical/rhythmicInterpersonalIntrapersonal
The Significance of Multiple Intelligences and Learning
StylesThe importance of these qualities for
teachers lies in their ability to identify preferred modes of learning and to adapt instruction so that all students get to practice learning in multiple ways.
No one recommends that students learn only in their preferred mode or that teachers teach in only one mode.
Cultural Groups May Differ in Communication Styles
Formal vs. Informal Communication
Emotional vs. Subdued Communication
Direct vs. Indirect Communication
Objective vs. Subjective Communication
Responses to Guilt and Accusations
Ethical Issues Students who speak a dialect of English, or
whose first language is not English, are likely to be stigmatized.
Debates about language in the schools are likely to be as much about issues of cultural domination as they are about language itself.
The assessment of students with limited English proficiency must be done with care.
Continued…
The increasing prevalence of English in world-wide modes of communication—especially television and the Internet—may mean that many languages are disappearing.
Some balance needs to be achieved between protecting “small” languages and encouraging international exchange.
Without diverse languages, diverse cultures may also disappear.
The negative American attitude toward learning more than one language may get in the way of our own international understanding.
Something to Think About
When we study human language, we are approaching what some might call the “human essence,” the distinctive qualities of mind that are, so far as we know, unique to man and that are inseparable from any critical phase of human existence, personal or social.
--Noam Chomsky