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{{teaching approach header}} | |||
== Group Talk - why? == | == Group Talk - why? == | ||
{{adaptedfrom|Group Talk in Science - Research Summary|Vygotsky|Lev Vygotsky (1973) believed that it was children’s interaction with others through language that most strongly influenced the level of conceptual understanding they could reach. He believed that we can learn from others, both of the same age and of a higher age and development level. One of the main ways this operates is through ''scaffolding ''in the ''zone of proximal development''. This concept refers to the gap between what a person is able to do alone and what she or he can do with the help of someone more knowledgeable or skilled than him or herself. It is here that the role of teachers, adults and peers comes to the fore in children’s learning. They can help bring the child’s knowledge to a higher level by intervening in the zone of proximal development by providing children’s thoughts with so-called scaffolds (small planned steps of support), which once the learning process is complete are no longer needed by the child.}} | {{adaptedfrom|Group Talk in Science - Research Summary|Vygotsky|Lev Vygotsky (1973) believed that it was children’s interaction with others through language that most strongly influenced the level of conceptual understanding they could reach. He believed that we can learn from others, both of the same age and of a higher age and development level. One of the main ways this operates is through ''scaffolding ''in the ''zone of proximal development''. This concept refers to the gap between what a person is able to do alone and what she or he can do with the help of someone more knowledgeable or skilled than him or herself. It is here that the role of teachers, adults and peers comes to the fore in children’s learning. They can help bring the child’s knowledge to a higher level by intervening in the zone of proximal development by providing children’s thoughts with so-called scaffolds (small planned steps of support), which once the learning process is complete are no longer needed by the child.}} | ||
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* ask questions rather than provide answers | * ask questions rather than provide answers | ||
* use others’ answers as prompts for argument}} | * use others’ answers as prompts for argument}} | ||
{{teaching approach footer}} |