'Becoming experts': learning through mediation
Purpose – This study is largely founded on Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, Feuerstein’s theory of Mediated Learning Experience and Lave and Wenger’s ‘community of practice’, which concerned building a community of learners that places mediation as central in learning and teaching. While the overall...
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my.uum.repo.2082010-07-11T03:10:43Z http://repo.uum.edu.my/208/ 'Becoming experts': learning through mediation Abdul Rahim, Fauziah Hood, Philip Coyle, Do LB Theory and practice of education Purpose – This study is largely founded on Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, Feuerstein’s theory of Mediated Learning Experience and Lave and Wenger’s ‘community of practice’, which concerned building a community of learners that places mediation as central in learning and teaching. While the overall study involved Malaysian Year One English and Mathematics classrooms, this article focuses only on the latter. Two research questions were posed: 1) How does the teacher/peers mediate learning? 2) How does mediation influence the individual’s identity? Method – This qualitative study was conducted within a period of three months. Data collection included intense classroom observations, interviews, classroom discourse and dialogic discussions with teachers and pupils. Microgenetic analyses of transcripts were made to show moment-to moment changes observed.Findings – Four types of mediation emerged from the data : Environmental mediation, cognitive mediation, affective mediation and metacognitive mediation (i.e., an ECAM model for mediation).Findings suggest that mediation enabled the Mathematics teacher to change, to take ownership and to sustain her new pedagogical approaches within the classroom. This re-focusing benefited her pupils, and dramatically changed a particular less able pupil from one who was initially ‘lost in his world,’ into one who was able to engage in the learning process, take ownership of his own learning, as well as mediate other pupils’ learning. Value – Hence it is argued that the ECAM model for mediation provided opportunities for this teacher and her pupil to expand their capacity to learn and develop their identities as individuals capable of learning and becoming ‘experts’. UUM College of Arts and Sciences 2009 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://repo.uum.edu.my/208/1/Fauziah_Abd_Rahim.pdf Abdul Rahim, Fauziah and Hood, Philip and Coyle, Do (2009) 'Becoming experts': learning through mediation. Malaysian Journal of Learning & Instruction, 6. pp. 1-21. ISSN 2180-2483 http://mjli.uum.edu.my |
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LB Theory and practice of education Abdul Rahim, Fauziah Hood, Philip Coyle, Do 'Becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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Purpose – This study is largely founded on Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, Feuerstein’s theory of Mediated Learning Experience and Lave and Wenger’s ‘community of practice’, which concerned building a community of learners that places mediation as central in learning and teaching. While the overall study involved Malaysian Year One English and Mathematics classrooms, this article focuses only on the latter. Two research questions were posed: 1) How
does the teacher/peers mediate learning? 2) How does mediation influence the individual’s identity? Method – This qualitative study was conducted within a period of three months. Data collection included intense classroom
observations, interviews, classroom discourse and dialogic
discussions with teachers and pupils. Microgenetic analyses of transcripts were made to show moment-to moment changes observed.Findings – Four types of mediation emerged from the data : Environmental mediation, cognitive mediation, affective mediation and metacognitive mediation (i.e., an ECAM model for mediation).Findings suggest that mediation enabled the Mathematics teacher to change, to take ownership and to sustain her new pedagogical approaches within the classroom. This re-focusing benefited her
pupils, and dramatically changed a particular less able pupil from one who was initially ‘lost in his world,’ into one who was able to engage in the learning process, take ownership of his own learning, as well as mediate other pupils’ learning. Value – Hence it is argued that the ECAM model for mediation provided opportunities for this teacher and her pupil to expand their capacity to learn and develop their identities as individuals capable of learning and becoming ‘experts’. |
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Article |
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Abdul Rahim, Fauziah Hood, Philip Coyle, Do |
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Abdul Rahim, Fauziah Hood, Philip Coyle, Do |
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Abdul Rahim, Fauziah |
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'Becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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'Becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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'Becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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'Becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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'Becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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'becoming experts': learning through mediation |
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UUM College of Arts and Sciences |
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2009 |
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http://repo.uum.edu.my/208/1/Fauziah_Abd_Rahim.pdf http://repo.uum.edu.my/208/ http://mjli.uum.edu.my |
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