The Context Of Vygotsky: Thinking And Speaking In A Social Context

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Vygotsky: thinking and speaking in a social context*

Children adopt the speech genres of their cultures (Bakhtin, 1986) via using them actively during interactions both with adults and peers (Bloom, 1998; Tomasello, 1999; Tomasello et al., 2005). Children firstly use the speech genres within social pragmatic speeches and then private (egocentric) speeches, until the end of preschool period from beginning to talk (Vygotksy,1999).

The characteristic of speeches during the preschool period is to be egocentric. Egocentric speech, according to Piaget (2005), is a common phenomenon of autistic thinking processes of children, and disappears with evolving social thoughts. Because it has actually no function. But Vygotsky did not agree with Piaget in this regard. According to Vygotksy (1999), egocentric (namely private) speech is a functional speech genre that is sustained by child's own (dialogic, Bakhtin, 1981). It is an …show more content…

According to Vygotsky (1999), internalization is the inner processes to acquire the monitoring and controlling skills directed via cultural signs and symbols. This inner place where learning takes in is subjective and context-depended in early ages (Gelman & Kalish, 2006). Thereafter conceptualization becomes more prescriptive, and is decomposed with internalization of the communicative language during the private speeches. With internalization of language, child begins to understand her own thinking processes, and reaches the tools of thinking about thinking (~metacognition). So child, as an individual, selects and sustains (objective) thinking praxises that are convenient to abstract social reality. In sum, higher mental processes are initially seen at the level of social conversations (subjective-experience-based and only pragmatical), and then at the individual and inner level (self-reflective and based upon the

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