Human cognition increasingly is coming to be understood and
studied as something that does not necessarily reside within
individuals, but rather as something that evolves through
interpersonal communication. Using the interpersonal event as the
unit of analysis, the authors of "Collaborative Cognition" examine
how children interactively co-construct knowledge and ways of
knowing in social contexts. In an illustration of the idea that
thinking is as much interactive as self-reflective--one that
supports the cognitive developmental theories of Jean Piaget and
Lev Vygotsky--this important new study examines the social origins
of thought, and the inherently discursive nature of thinking
itself.
The social context in question was created by the authors, who
showed to pairs of children a variety of game materials and asked
them to collaborate on creating a board game. Negotiating the
co-construction of a game, back and forth, turn by turn, enabled
the children to construct jointly a series of mutually obligatory
goals and rules that sequentially defined the evolution of
increasingly more complex modes of play. This innovative use of
sequential analyses to study evolving streams of conversation
discourse represents a fully process-oriented, rather than
outcome-oriented, approach to studying cognitive development.
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