0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R1,000 - R2,500 (2)
  • R2,500 - R5,000 (2)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 4 of 4 matches in All Departments

Constructing (in)competence - Disabling Evaluations in Clinical and Social interaction (Paperback): Dana Kovarsky, Madeline... Constructing (in)competence - Disabling Evaluations in Clinical and Social interaction (Paperback)
Dana Kovarsky, Madeline Maxwell, Judith F. Duchan
R1,884 Discovery Miles 18 840 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Competence and incompetence are constructs that emerge in the social milieu of everyday life. Individuals are continually making and revising judgments about each other's abilities as they interact. The flexible, situated view of competence conveyed by the research of the authors in this volume is a departure from the way that competence is usually thought about in the fields of communication disabilities and education. In the social constructivist view, competence is not a fixed mass, residing within an individual, or a fixed judgment, defined externally. Rather, it is variable, sensitive to what is going on in the here and now, and coconstructed by those present. Constructions of competence are tied to evaluations implicit in the communication of the participants as well as to explicit evaluations of how things are going.
The authors address the social construction of competence in a variety of situations: engaging in therapy for communication and other disorders, working and living with people with disabilities, speaking a second language, living with deafness, and giving and receiving instruction. Their studies focus on adults and children, including those with disabilities (aphasia, traumatic brain injury, augmentative systems users), as they go about managing their lives and identities. They examine the all-important context in which participants make competence judgments, assess the impact of implicit judgments and formal diagnoses, and look at the types of evaluations made during interaction.
This book makes an argument all helping professionals need to hear: institutional, clinical, and social practices promoting judgments must be changed to practices that are more positive and empowering.

Deixis in Narrative - A Cognitive Science Perspective (Paperback): Judith F. Duchan, Gail A. Bruder, Lynne E. Hewitt Deixis in Narrative - A Cognitive Science Perspective (Paperback)
Judith F. Duchan, Gail A. Bruder, Lynne E. Hewitt
R2,166 Discovery Miles 21 660 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume describes the theoretical and empirical results of a seven year collaborative effort of cognitive scientists to develop a computational model for narrative understanding. Disciplines represented include artificial intelligence, cognitive psychology, communicative disorders, education, English, geography, linguistics, and philosophy. The book argues for an organized representational system -- a Deictic Center (DC) -- which is constructed by readers from language in a text combined with their world knowledge.
As readers approach a new text they need to gather and maintain information about who the participants are and where and when the events take place. This information plays a central role in understanding the narrative. The editors claim that readers maintain this information without explicit textual reminders by including it in their mental model of the story world.
Because of the centrality of the temporal, spatial, and character information in narratives, they developed their notion of a DC as a crucial part of the reader's mental model of the narrative. The events that carry the temporal and spatial core of the narrative are linguistically and conceptually constrained according to certain principles that can be relatively well defined. A narrative obviously unfolds one word, or one sentence, at a time. This volume suggests that cognitively a narrative usually unfolds one place and time at a time. This spatio-temporal location functions as part of the DC of the narrative. It is the "here" and "now" of the reader's "mind's eye" in the world of the story.
Organized into seven parts, this book describes the goal of the cognitive science project resulting in this volume, the methodological approaches taken, and the history of the collaborative effort. It provides a historical and theoretical background underlying the DC theory, including discussions of deixis in language and the nature of fiction. It goes on to outline the computational framework and how it is used to represent deixis in narrative, and details the linguistic devices implicated in the DC theory. Other subjects covered include: crosslinguistic indicators of subjectivity, psychological investigations of the use of deixis by children and adults as they process narratives, conversation, direction giving, implications for emerging literacy, and a narrator's experience in writing a short story.

Deixis in Narrative - A Cognitive Science Perspective (Hardcover): Judith F. Duchan, Gail A. Bruder, Lynne E. Hewitt Deixis in Narrative - A Cognitive Science Perspective (Hardcover)
Judith F. Duchan, Gail A. Bruder, Lynne E. Hewitt
R4,540 Discovery Miles 45 400 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This volume describes the theoretical and empirical results of a seven year collaborative effort of cognitive scientists to develop a computational model for narrative understanding. Disciplines represented include artificial intelligence, cognitive psychology, communicative disorders, education, English, geography, linguistics, and philosophy. The book argues for an organized representational system -- a Deictic Center (DC) -- which is constructed by readers from language in a text combined with their world knowledge.
As readers approach a new text they need to gather and maintain information about who the participants are and where and when the events take place. This information plays a central role in understanding the narrative. The editors claim that readers maintain this information without explicit textual reminders by including it in their mental model of the story world.
Because of the centrality of the temporal, spatial, and character information in narratives, they developed their notion of a DC as a crucial part of the reader's mental model of the narrative. The events that carry the temporal and spatial core of the narrative are linguistically and conceptually constrained according to certain principles that can be relatively well defined. A narrative obviously unfolds one word, or one sentence, at a time. This volume suggests that cognitively a narrative usually unfolds one place and time at a time. This spatio-temporal location functions as part of the DC of the narrative. It is the "here" and "now" of the reader's "mind's eye" in the world of the story.
Organized into seven parts, this book describes the goal of the cognitive science project resulting in this volume, the methodological approaches taken, and the history of the collaborative effort. It provides a historical and theoretical background underlying the DC theory, including discussions of deixis in language and the nature of fiction. It goes on to outline the computational framework and how it is used to represent deixis in narrative, and details the linguistic devices implicated in the DC theory. Other subjects covered include: crosslinguistic indicators of subjectivity, psychological investigations of the use of deixis by children and adults as they process narratives, conversation, direction giving, implications for emerging literacy, and a narrator's experience in writing a short story.

Constructing (in)competence - Disabling Evaluations in Clinical and Social interaction (Hardcover, 805th): Dana Kovarsky,... Constructing (in)competence - Disabling Evaluations in Clinical and Social interaction (Hardcover, 805th)
Dana Kovarsky, Madeline Maxwell, Judith F. Duchan
R4,295 Discovery Miles 42 950 Ships in 18 - 22 working days

Competence and incompetence are constructs that emerge in the social milieu of everyday life. Individuals are continually making and revising judgments about each other's abilities as they interact. The flexible, situated view of competence conveyed by the research of the authors in this volume is a departure from the way that competence is usually thought about in the fields of communication disabilities and education. In the social constructivist view, competence is not a fixed mass, residing within an individual, or a fixed judgment, defined externally. Rather, it is variable, sensitive to what is going on in the here and now, and coconstructed by those present. Constructions of competence are tied to evaluations implicit in the communication of the participants as well as to explicit evaluations of how things are going.
The authors address the social construction of competence in a variety of situations: engaging in therapy for communication and other disorders, working and living with people with disabilities, speaking a second language, living with deafness, and giving and receiving instruction. Their studies focus on adults and children, including those with disabilities (aphasia, traumatic brain injury, augmentative systems users), as they go about managing their lives and identities. They examine the all-important context in which participants make competence judgments, assess the impact of implicit judgments and formal diagnoses, and look at the types of evaluations made during interaction.
This book makes an argument all helping professionals need to hear: institutional, clinical, and social practices promoting judgments must be changed to practices that are more positive and empowering.

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
Cities and Affordable Housing…
Sasha Tsenkova Paperback R1,252 Discovery Miles 12 520
StreetWays - Chronicling the Homeless in…
Jr. Provenzo, Edward Ameen, … Hardcover R1,937 Discovery Miles 19 370
The Blinded City - Ten Years In…
Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon Paperback  (1)
R330 R299 Discovery Miles 2 990
Homelessness In America
Jim Baumohl Hardcover R2,546 R2,247 Discovery Miles 22 470
American Homelessness - A Reference…
Mary Ellen Hombs Hardcover R1,941 R1,739 Discovery Miles 17 390
The Salt Path - The 85-Week Sunday Times…
Raynor Winn Paperback  (1)
R295 R272 Discovery Miles 2 720
Remaking Cities (Routledge Revivals…
Alison Ravetz Hardcover R5,216 Discovery Miles 52 160
Vagrancy in English Culture and Society…
David Hitchcock Hardcover R4,579 Discovery Miles 45 790
No Place Like Home - Wealth, Community…
McCabe Hardcover R3,568 Discovery Miles 35 680
Sacred Civics - Building Seven…
Jayne Engle, Julian Agyeman, … Hardcover R4,502 Discovery Miles 45 020

 

Partners