Buy on Amazon.com

My Favorite Pages

Please login first to manage your favorite pages.

We like you! Like us!

toolbar powered by Conduit
Scientific vs. Spontaneous Concepts: Vygotskian perspective Print E-mail
Psycholinguistics - Language and Thought
Written by V. Temina-Kingsolver   
Thursday, 31 July 2008 09:39
Article Index
Scientific vs. Spontaneous Concepts: Vygotskian perspective
Distinctive characteristics
Interrelatedness of concepts
Role of spontaneous concepts
Weaknesses and strengths of concepts
References
All Pages

Vygotsky borrowed the terms spontaneous and non-spontaneous from Piaget; however, he included scientific concepts in non-spontaneous and preferred the term everyday concepts to the term spontaneous.

Everyday concepts are the meanings of words of everyday language, which a child uses in everyday life/interaction, while scientific concepts are the ones the child masters during systematic instruction of basic knowledge (for example, concepts of the number, subject, literary devices and so on).




 
Bookmark and Share

Our Latest Tweets

Support Language Avenue - Visit our Bookstore

Search Amazon.com


Statistics

Members : 387
Content : 301
Web Links : 35
Content View Hits : 450819