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Chapter 25 - Transforming by Participating

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 February 2025

Frank Kessel
Affiliation:
University of New Mexico
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Summary

Barbara Rogoff reflects on the sources and pathway of her work on understanding culture and individual learning as aspects of a mutually constituting process. She describes her efforts across decades to convey the idea that learning is a process of transforming one’s participation in cultural communities, which simultaneously contributes to transforming and maintaining the communities’ cultural practices. As ways of getting traction on understanding and researching from the mutually constituting perspective, Rogoff offers the metaphors of lenses that bring aspects of the overall process into focus, and fractals that aid in seeing the similarity of cultural patterns across both small moments and generations. She connects these ideas with several concepts and lines of research that she and her colleagues have contributed: everyday cognition, guided participation, Learning by Observing and Pitching In (LOPI) to family and community endeavors, interdependence with autonomy, collaborative initiative, simultaneous attention, fluid collaboration, and “Barbara’s do-do theory.”

Type
Chapter
Information
Pillars of Developmental Psychology
Recollections and Reflections
, pp. 278 - 291
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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References

Suggested Reading

Gutierrez, K. & Rogoff, B. (2003). Cultural ways of learning: Individual traits or repertoires of practice. Educational Researcher, 32(5) 1925.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B. (1982). Integrating context and cognitive development. In Lamb, M. E. & Brown, A. L. (Eds.), Advances in Developmental Psychology (Vol. 2). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.Google Scholar
Rogoff, B. (1995). Observing sociocultural activity on three planes: Participatory appropriation, guided participation, and apprenticeship. In Wertsch, J. V., del Rio, P., & Alvarez, A. (Eds.), Sociocultural Studies of Mind (pp. 139164). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B., Goodman Turkanis, C., & Bartlett, L. (2001). Learning Together: Children and Adults in a School Community. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogoff, B. & Mejía-Arauz, R. (2022). The key role of community in Learning by Observing and Pitching In to family and community endeavors. Journal for the Study of Education and Development, 45(3), 494548. https://doi.org.10.1080/02103702.2022.2086770.Google Scholar
Rogoff, B., Mistry, J. J., Göncü, A., & Mosier, C. (1993). Guided participation in cultural activity by toddlers and caregivers. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 58(7, Serial No. 236).CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

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