“Happy New School Year!”
For me, it’s a
new year of reading recovery training, new learning, and new students. I think the students are the best part!
But it is also an
ending for me. It’s the end of my
candidacy exams for my PhD work. It
signals that I am ready for independent supervised research as a doctoral
candidate.
So my
summer was filled with research studies.
I didn’t do any, and I really mean any beach time, light-hearted, summer
fun reading. It was deep thinking,
topped off with heaping spoons of intellectual interpretation. While I am really passionate about pushing
the education profession forward, I always miss the delight of children’s
smiles and laughter embedded in my daily work as a practicing teacher.
Dr. Seth
Chaiklin from the University of Bath has a unique perspective on collaboration,
Vygotsky, and the zone of proximal development.
“ Vygotsky often uses the term collaboration in his discussion about assessing the zone of proximal
development. The term ‘collaboration’
should not be understood as a joint, coordinated effort to move forward, where
the more expert partner is always providing support at the moments where
maturing functions are inadequate.
Rather it appears that this term is being used to refer to any situation
in which a child is being offered some interaction with another person in
relation to a problem to be solved” (Chaiklin, 2003, p. 54).
Citation from: Chaiklin, S. (2003). The zone of proximal development in
Vygotsky’s analysis of learning and instruction.
In Kozulin, A.,Gindis, B., Ageyev, V. S., & Miller, S. M. (Eds.), Vygotsky’s
educational theory in cultural
context, (pp. 39-64). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
The biggest
take away for me is that collaboration is not just with teammates and
colleagues (the adults), but with the students also. We are not always showing them; sometimes scaffolding involves doing it together. I am excited to learn with and from the
children and add some candy to my "School Year Candyland!"
If I am
successful with my exams, it also signals the beginning of a new type of
collaboration with Josie and other willing teammates on what it means to be a
reader and a writer. What will we learn
this year? Join us on our journey by
leaving comments on what you want to learn this year. What do you want to learn, Josie?
I adore this conversation you two are having here!
ReplyDeleteYour Candyland metaphor cracked me up!
I adore this conversation you two are having here!
ReplyDeleteYour Candyland metaphor cracked me up!