Publication | Closed Access
Where Is the Mind? Constructivist and Sociocultural Perspectives on Mathematical Development
1.1K
Citations
27
References
1994
Year
Apparent Forced ChoiceMathematics CognitionEducational PsychologyEducationSocial PracticeCognitive AnthropologySocial SciencesMathematical PsychologyMathematics EducationMathematical DevelopmentMathematical CognitionCognitive DevelopmentConstructivismNumerical CompetenceCognitive Self-organizationConstructivist Perspective FocusMindsetCognitive ScienceSociocultural PerspectivesCultureEducational Theory
Currently, considerable debate focuses on whether mind is located in the head or in the individual-in-social-action, and whether development is cognitive self-organization or enculturation into established practices. In this article, I question assumptions that initiate this apparent forced choice between constructivist and sociocultural perspectives. I contend that the two perspectives are complementary. Also, claims that either perspective captures the essence of people and communities should be rejected for pragmatic justifications that consider the contextual relevance and usefulness of a perspective. I argue that the sociocultural perspective informs theories of the conditions far the possibility of learning, whereas theories developed from the constructivist perspective focus on what students learn and the processes by which they do so.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1