Common Knowledge (Routledge Revivals): The Development of Understanding in the Classroom

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Routledge, Feb 1, 2013 - Education - 206 pages

First published in 1987, Common Knowledge offers a radical departure from the traditionally individualistic psychologies which have underpinned modern approaches to educational theory and practice. The authors present a study of education as the creation of ‘common knowledge’ or shared understanding between teacher and pupils. They show the presenting, receiving, sharing, controlling, negotiating, understanding and misunderstanding of knowledge in the classroom to be an intrinsically social communicative process which can be revealed only through close analysis of joint activity and classroom talk. Basing this analysis on a detailed examination of video-recorded school lessons with groups of 8 to 10-year-olds, they show how classroom communications take place against a background of implicit under-standing, some of which is never made explicit to pupils, while there develops during the lessons a context of assumed common knowledge about what has been said, done, or understood.

This wide-ranging study makes an important contribution to the current debate about both teaching methods and the structure of education. It is essential reading for educationalists and developmental psychologists and has a clear practical relevance to teachers and teacher trainers.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 Approaches to classroom knowledge and talk
8
3 An ideology of teaching
32
4 Groundrules of educational discourse
42
5 Context and continuity
62
6 Ritual and principle
92
7 Communication and control
128
8 Conclusions and implications
160
Outline of the research project
171
Bibliography
182
Index
189
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About the author (2013)

Edwards, Derek; Mercer, Neil

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