社论第30卷第1期

IF 1.8 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Karlyn R. Adams-Wiggins, Aydin Bal, S. Choudry, Arturo Cortez, B. Ferholt, Ivana Guarrasi, Alfredo Jornet, Monica Lemos, M. W. Mahmood, Bonnie Nardi, Antti Rajala, A. Stetsenko, Julian Williams
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It elaborates the specific case of Indigenous Learning Lab (ILL), where local stakeholders’ engage in transformative future-making efforts to design a culturally decolonizing support system to address racial injustice at a rural high school. Using Levitas (2013) work on utopia as a method as their theoretical lens, the authors examine their critical design ethnography work at the high school. This work documented the school community’s “collective endeavor toward decolonizing the future.” The authors studied the ways in which Native American students, families, tribal community members, and non-Native school staff expanded their future sociopolitical imaginations to envision alternative ways of organizing education. Writing from a different and yet closely related tradition of CHAT scholarship – French-speaking activity-oriented ergonomics – Lucie Cuvelier, in “Constructive activity and expansion of the object: cross-fertilization,” also discusses developmental, intervention-based methodologies, but with an emphasis on theory. Cuvelier’s is an empirically-grounded theoretical essay on the relationship between constructive activity and productive activity, two notions that scholars consider “central in activity-oriented approaches to ergonomics . . . focused on developmental issues.” Drawing on French activity theory (Clot, 2009) and the Finnish tradition of Developmental Work Research initiated by Engeström (2016) and colleagues, Cuvelier hypothesizes that “constructive activity is characterized by the expansion of the object of activity within productive activity.” To test this hypothesis, she conducted an empirical study examining the activities of an anesthetist working in pediatric services at two French university hospitals. This work substantiates the conceptualization of constructive activity as a movement of expansion of the object. A third research article deals with the challenging issue of emotion regulation in young orphan children. Taking a cultural-historical perspective on emotions, and focusing on play as developmental activity, the article, “A cultural-historical study of emotions in play: catharsis and perezhivanie in an institutional care setting,” by Xianyu Meng, Marilyn Fleer, Liang Li, and Marie Hammer, explores how coexperiencing dramatic interactions in playworlds supports a child’s resolution and regulation of emotions in an institutional care setting in China. Theoretically, the article draws on two notions that Vygotsky developed in different periods. 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It elaborates the specific case of Indigenous Learning Lab (ILL), where local stakeholders’ engage in transformative future-making efforts to design a culturally decolonizing support system to address racial injustice at a rural high school. Using Levitas (2013) work on utopia as a method as their theoretical lens, the authors examine their critical design ethnography work at the high school. This work documented the school community’s “collective endeavor toward decolonizing the future.” The authors studied the ways in which Native American students, families, tribal community members, and non-Native school staff expanded their future sociopolitical imaginations to envision alternative ways of organizing education. Writing from a different and yet closely related tradition of CHAT scholarship – French-speaking activity-oriented ergonomics – Lucie Cuvelier, in “Constructive activity and expansion of the object: cross-fertilization,” also discusses developmental, intervention-based methodologies, but with an emphasis on theory. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

我们在本期开始时欢迎我们的思想、文化和活动编辑集体的新成员Aydin Bal(威斯康星大学麦迪逊分校)。Aydin是特殊教育教授,也是AERA文化历史研究SIG 2022年早期职业奖的获得者。Aydin对文化历史理论的了解,以及他在文化、学习、心理健康和社会正义之间相互作用的经验和背景,对该杂志来说是非常宝贵的。Aydin进一步扩大了我们的团队,为我们在编辑工作中发挥更多元化的领导作用做出了贡献。本期包括五篇研究文章和一篇书评。Dosun Ko、Aydin Bal、Aaron Bird Bear、Linda Orie和Dian Mawene的第一篇研究文章继续了越来越多的研究,这些研究借鉴了非殖民化认识论(Smith,2021)、形成性干预(Engeström,2016)和乌托邦方法论(Rajala et al.,2022),通过CHAT知情研究来纠正社会正义问题。这篇题为“学习实验室是一种乌托邦式的未来制造方法:将知识生产非殖民化,以实现学校学科中的种族正义”的文章讨论了学习实验室作为一种面向实践的系统设计干预,它促进了问题识别(即对系统矛盾的批判性反思)和问题解决(即,集体设计行动。它阐述了土著学习实验室(ILL)的具体案例,在该实验室中,当地利益相关者参与变革性的未来努力,设计一个文化非殖民化的支持系统,以解决农村高中的种族不公正问题。作者以Levitas(2013)关于乌托邦的研究作为理论视角,考察了他们在高中的批判性设计民族志工作。这项工作记录了学校社区“为实现未来非殖民化所做的集体努力”。作者研究了美国原住民学生、家庭、部落社区成员和非原住民学校工作人员如何扩展他们未来的社会政治想象力,以设想组织教育的替代方式。Lucie Cuvelier在《建设性活动和对象的扩展:交叉受精》一书中,从不同但密切相关的CHAT学术传统——法语活动导向的工效学——出发,也讨论了基于干预的发展方法,但强调了理论。Cuvelier的是一篇基于经验的关于建设性活动和生产性活动之间关系的理论文章,学者们认为这两个概念“是以活动为导向的工效学方法的核心……专注于发展问题。”。“根据法国活动理论(Clot,2009)和Engeström(2016)及其同事倡导的芬兰发展性工作研究传统,Cuvelier假设“建设性活动的特征是活动对象在生产活动中的扩展。”为了检验这一假设,她进行了一项实证研究,调查了一名在法国两家大学医院从事儿科服务的麻醉师的活动。这部作品将建设性活动的概念化具体化为对象的扩展运动。第三篇研究文章涉及年幼孤儿的情绪调节这一具有挑战性的问题。本文从文化历史的角度看待情感,并将游戏作为一种发展活动,由孟宪玉、玛丽莲·弗勒、梁丽和玛丽·哈默撰写,题为“游戏中情感的文化历史研究:制度关怀环境下的宣泄和perezivanie”,探讨了在中国的机构护理环境中,在游戏世界中共同体验戏剧性的互动如何支持儿童解决和调节情绪。从理论上讲,本文借鉴了维果茨基在不同时期发展起来的两种观念。首先,是宣泄的概念,在他的《艺术心理学》中发展起来,认为宣泄“为我们进一步理解儿童在游戏中的情绪过程开辟了新的可能性,在游戏中,想象力和戏剧与艺术一样是固有的。”这篇文章将前者与心智、文化和活动的概念联系起来2023,第30卷,第1,1-4https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2248982
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial vol. 30 issue 1
We open this issue welcoming a new member to our Mind, Culture, and Activity editorial collective, Aydin Bal (University of Wisconsin-Madison). Aydin is Professor of Special Education, and recipient of the 2022 Early Career award of the AERA Cultural-Historical Research SIG. Aydin’s knowledge of cultural-historical theories, as well as his experience and background on the interplay between culture, learning, mental health, and social justice, are invaluable to the journal. Aydin further expands our team, contributing to a more diverse leadership in the editorial work we do. The present issue includes five research articles and a book review. The first research article, by Dosun Ko, Aydin Bal, Aaron Bird Bear, Linda Orie, and Dian Mawene, continues a growing body of research drawing from decolonizing epistemologies (Smith, 2021), formative interventions (Engeström, 2016) and utopian methodologies (Rajala et al., 2022)) to redress issues of social justice through CHAT-informed research. Titled “Learning lab as a utopian methodology for future making: decolonizing knowledge production toward racial justice in school discipline,” the article discusses Learning Labs as a praxis-oriented systemic design intervention that facilitates a dialectical interplay between problem identification, that is, critical reflection on systemic contradictions, and problemsolving, that is, collective design actions. It elaborates the specific case of Indigenous Learning Lab (ILL), where local stakeholders’ engage in transformative future-making efforts to design a culturally decolonizing support system to address racial injustice at a rural high school. Using Levitas (2013) work on utopia as a method as their theoretical lens, the authors examine their critical design ethnography work at the high school. This work documented the school community’s “collective endeavor toward decolonizing the future.” The authors studied the ways in which Native American students, families, tribal community members, and non-Native school staff expanded their future sociopolitical imaginations to envision alternative ways of organizing education. Writing from a different and yet closely related tradition of CHAT scholarship – French-speaking activity-oriented ergonomics – Lucie Cuvelier, in “Constructive activity and expansion of the object: cross-fertilization,” also discusses developmental, intervention-based methodologies, but with an emphasis on theory. Cuvelier’s is an empirically-grounded theoretical essay on the relationship between constructive activity and productive activity, two notions that scholars consider “central in activity-oriented approaches to ergonomics . . . focused on developmental issues.” Drawing on French activity theory (Clot, 2009) and the Finnish tradition of Developmental Work Research initiated by Engeström (2016) and colleagues, Cuvelier hypothesizes that “constructive activity is characterized by the expansion of the object of activity within productive activity.” To test this hypothesis, she conducted an empirical study examining the activities of an anesthetist working in pediatric services at two French university hospitals. This work substantiates the conceptualization of constructive activity as a movement of expansion of the object. A third research article deals with the challenging issue of emotion regulation in young orphan children. Taking a cultural-historical perspective on emotions, and focusing on play as developmental activity, the article, “A cultural-historical study of emotions in play: catharsis and perezhivanie in an institutional care setting,” by Xianyu Meng, Marilyn Fleer, Liang Li, and Marie Hammer, explores how coexperiencing dramatic interactions in playworlds supports a child’s resolution and regulation of emotions in an institutional care setting in China. Theoretically, the article draws on two notions that Vygotsky developed in different periods. First, is the notion of catharsis, developed in his Psychology of Art which argues that catharsis “opens up new possibilities for furthering our understanding of children’s emotional processes in play, where imagination and drama are inherent as they are in art.” The article connects the former with the notion of MIND, CULTURE, AND ACTIVITY 2023, VOL. 30, NO. 1, 1–4 https://doi.org/10.1080/10749039.2023.2248982
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来源期刊
Mind Culture and Activity
Mind Culture and Activity EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
15.80%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Mind, Culture, and Activity (MCA) is an interdisciplinary, international journal devoted to the study of the human mind in its cultural and historical contexts. Articles appearing in MCA draw upon research and theory in a variety of disciplines, including anthropology, cognitive science, education, linguistics, psychology, and sociology. Particular emphasis is placed upon research that seeks to resolve methodological problems associated with the analysis of human action in everyday activities and theoretical approaches that place culture and activity at the center of attempts to understand human nature.
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