Decades of research in the cognitive and learning sciences have
led to a growing recognition of the incredibly multi-faceted nature
of human knowing and learning. Up to now, this multifaceted nature
has been visible mostly in distinct and often competing communities
of researchers. From a purely scientific perspective, "siloed"
science where different traditions refuse to speak with one
another, or merely ignore one another is unacceptable. This
ambitious volume attempts to kick-start a serious, new line of work
that merges, or properly articulates, different traditions with
their divergent historical, theoretical, and methodological
commitments that, nonetheless, both focus on the highly detailed
analysis of processes of knowing and learning as they unfold in
interactional contexts in real time.
"
Knowing and Learning in Interaction" puts two traditions in
dialogue with one another: Knowledge Analysis (KA), which draws on
intellectual roots in developmental psychology and focuses on the
nature and form of individual knowledge systems, and Interaction
Analysis (IA), which has been prominent in approaches that seek to
understand and explain learning as a sequence of real-time moves by
individuals as they interact with interlocutors, learning
environments, and the world around them. The volume s four-part
organization opens up space for both substantive contributions on
areas of conceptual and empirical work as well as opportunities for
reflection, integration, and coordination."
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