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Smith, Raymond – Journal of Workplace Learning, 2006
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to report and discuss research that sought to explore how the individually purposeful nature of new employee workplace learning might be understood through its conception as epistemological agency, that is, the personally mediated construction of knowledge. Design/methodology/approach: Using a sociocultural…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Employees, Ethnography, Epistemology
Shaffer, David Williamson; Clinton, Katherine A. – Mind, Culture, and Activity, 2006
In this article we argue that new computational tools problematize the concept of thought within current sociocultural theories of technology and cognition by challenging the traditional position of privilege that humans occupy in sociocultural analyses. We draw on work by Shaffer and Kaput (1999) and Latour (1996a, 1996b, 1996c) to extend the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Theory Practice Relationship, Sociocultural Patterns, Technology Uses in Education
Kenway, Jane; Fahey, Johannah – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2006
This paper focuses on the shifting terrain of mobile researchers beginning with an overview of research and research policy on "brain mobility", and then discussing what we call their optical illusions/delusions. Subsequently, our main purpose is to elaborate on a line of inquiry that offers richer notions of researcher mobility, connectivity and…
Descriptors: Brain Drain, Relocation, Ethnography, Researchers
O'Toole, Sarah; de Abreu, Guida – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2005
This article explores the ways in which parents use their own past experiences as a mediational tool for understanding their child's current school learning. Following a sociocultural approach parents' past experiences were examined drawing on the notions of (1) heterochronicity, which looks at the partially overlapping histories of the individual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Teacher Attitudes, Learning Experience
Macfarlane, Angus; Glynn, Ted; Cavanagh, Tom; Bateman, Sonja – Australian Journal of Indigenous Education, 2007
In order to better understand the present trends in New Zealand's schooling contexts, there is a clarion call for educators to develop sensitivity and sensibility towards the cultural backgrounds and experiences of Maori students. This paper reports on the work of four scholars who share research that has been undertaken in educational settings…
Descriptors: Pacific Islanders, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Populations, Cultural Influences
Smith, Glenn Gordon; Kurthen, Hermann – International Journal on E-Learning, 2007
The authors analyzed online interactions in hybrid and blended courses to: (a) investigate if constructs from micro-sociology, such as self-talk, norms, and front-back-stage performance, provide a theoretical context for online interaction, and (b) compare courses with more versus fewer online components in terms of online interaction patterns.…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Interaction, Norms, Online Courses
van Oers, Bert; Poland, Marielle – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2007
One of the missions of education is to prepare children for complex tasks that occur in their cultural environment. By means of abstracting, the effects of this complexity can be reduced. Recent research and theoretical development show us that young children already seem to be able to think abstractly. The acknowledgement of this potential in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sociocultural Patterns, Cultural Context, Abstract Reasoning
Hennessy, Sara; Deaney, Rosemary; Ruthven, Kenneth; Winterbottom, Mark – Learning, Media and Technology, 2007
This study aimed to extend the currently limited understanding of how pedagogy is developing in response to the influx of interactive whiteboards (IWBs) in schools in the UK and some other countries. A case study approach was employed to investigate how experienced classroom practitioners are beginning to harness the functionality of this…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Science Instruction, Focus Groups, Interviews
Sinton, Diana Stuart; Huber, William A. – Journal of Geography, 2007
Ethnic music is a strong indicator of cultural identity. Central and Eastern European ethnic groups have historically been associated with folk music traditions, such as polka, and radio broadcasting patterns in the United States reflect continued demand for and support of this music. Data from the 2000 Census was used to generate maps of the…
Descriptors: Music, Folk Culture, Polish Americans, Ethnic Groups
Steinman, Linda – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2007
I define the "literacy autobiography" as a reflective, first-person account of one's development as a writing being. In this article I share a classroom practice that invited language learners to consider and compose their literacy autobiographies (LA). The context was a university credit English as a second language (ESL) classroom. The purposes…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Constructivism (Learning), Autobiographies, Second Language Learning
Dunphy, Elizabeth – Irish Educational Studies, 2007
A sense of number is now generally recognised as a central factor in learning, and later applying, mathematics. Consequently, number sense is increasingly emphasised in curriculum documentation related to mathematics. The "Primary School Curriculum: Mathematics," published by the Government of Ireland in 1999, is no exception. It…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Young Children, Foreign Countries, Number Concepts
Portes, Pedro R., Ed. – Journal of the Society for Accelerative Learning and Teaching, 1993
This special issue is devoted to the cultural-historical school of thought about mental development based on the work of Lev Vygotsky. The research of Vygotsky addressed the sociocultural basis of higher-level cognitive functions, and ascribed an influential role to human speech and other mediational tools in originating changes in cognition and…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Children, Cognitive Development, Educational Strategies
Reel, Judee – 1994
This paper examines universalism and particularism in the context of following traffic rules and cross-cultural communication in Taiwanese and U.S. adults. A universalist culture such as the United States emphasizes rules; the particularist culture of Taiwan emphasizes relationships. Universalists follow the rules no matter what; particularists…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Cultural Differences, Foreign Countries, Individual Differences
Webb, Jean – 1996
This paper examines the state of children's literature by tracing some of the side effects of nineteenth-century English children's literature. During their early histories, the British colonies, including America, were economically unable to produce their own children's books. Reading materials were imported from the home country, and, likewise,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Cultural Influences, English Literature, Foreign Countries
Okushi, Yoshiko – 1998
This study investigated how native Japanese speakers use honorifics in everyday social interaction. Honorifics are affixes, words, and formulaic phrases that follow linguistic and sociolinguistic rules and are believed to mark a speaker's politeness toward an addressee or another referenced person. The honorific system is incorporated into most…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Interpersonal Communication, Japanese, Language Patterns

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