Prelims

Heidi Flavian (Achva Academic College, Israel)

Mediation and Thinking Development in Schools: Theories and Practices for Education

ISBN: 978-1-78756-023-9, eISBN: 978-1-78756-020-8

Publication date: 27 September 2019

Citation

Flavian, H. (2019), "Prelims", Mediation and Thinking Development in Schools: Theories and Practices for Education, Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. i-xv. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78756-020-820191003

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2019 Heidi Flavian


Half Title Page

Mediation and Thinking Development in Schools

Series Page

Mediation and Thinking Development in Schools

Theories and Practices for Education

Heidi Flavian

Achva Academic College, Israel

United Kingdom – North America – Japan – India Malaysia – China

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Howard House, Wagon Lane, Bingley BD16 1WA, UK

First edition 2019

Copyright © 2019 Heidi Flavian

Published under an exclusive licence

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No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted in any form or by any means electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without either the prior written permission of the publisher or a licence permitting restricted copying issued in the UK by The Copyright Licensing Agency and in the USA by The Copyright Clearance Center. No responsibility is accepted for the accuracy of information contained in the text, illustrations or advertisements. The opinions expressed in these chapters are not necessarily those of the Author or the publisher.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

ISBN: 978-1-78756-023-9 (Paperback)

ISBN: 978-1-78756-020-8 (E-ISBN)

ISBN: 978-1-78756-022-2 (Epub)

Contents

List of Graphic Models ix
Acknowledgements xi
Preface xiii
Mediation and Thinking Development in Schools: Theories and Practices for Education 1
 Introduction 1
1. Thinking Development 5
 1.1. John Dewey (1859–1952) 6
 1.2. Jean Piaget (1896–1980) 11
 1.3. Lev Vygotsky (1896–1934) 13
 1.4. Reuven Feuerstein (1921–2014) 16
  1.4.1. The Input Phase 17
  1.4.2. The Elaboration Phase 18
  1.4.3. The Output Phase 19
 1.5. Howard Earl Gardner (1943–) 22
 1.6. The Neuropedagogy Approach 26
2. Mediation: A Unique Educational Process 31
 2.1. Mediation, Teaching and Learning 32
 2.2. Mediation as a Key for Thinking Development 34
 2.3. Necessary Foundations for Practicing Mediation 37
  2.3.1. Feuerstein’s Universal Parameters of Mediation 42
  2.3.2. Situational Parameters Reinforcing and Elaborating MLE 43
3. School Students; Learning Differentiations Teachers Need to Recognise 47
 3.1. Motivation, Learning and Thinking Development 50
 3.2. Culture, Learning and Thinking Development 53
 3.3. Pedagogy, Taxonomy and Teaching Strategies 58
4. Mediation and Teaching for Students’ Thinking Development 65
 4.1. An Integrated Model for Planning Thinking Development through Mediation 68
 4.2. Mediation and Learning Processes in Early Childhood in a Family Setting and on a Daily Basis 78
  4.2.1. Mediation in a Family Setting; Example No. 1: Family Dinner 80
  4.2.3. Mediation in a Family Setting; Example No. 2: Completing a Jigsaw Puzzle 84
  4.2.4. Mediation in a Family Setting; Example No. 3: ‘Arguing versus Discussing’ 88
  4.2.5. Mediation in a Family Setting; Example No. 4: Getting Ready for School 93
 4.3. Mediation and Learning Processes in the Classroom 98
  4.3.1. Mediation in the Classroom; Example No.1: Why Should We Come to School? 100
  4.3.2. Mediation in the Classroom; Example No. 2: Learning to Write 105
  4.3.3. Mediation in the Classroom; Example No. 3: The Four Arithmetic Operations 112
  4.3.4. Mediation in the Classroom; Example No.4: Different States of Matter 116
Bibliography 121
Index 129
About the Author 133

List of Graphic Models

Model 1: The Role of Human Mediation in Learning Theories 30
Model 2: Planning and Conducting Thinking Development through Mediation 77

Acknowledgements

I would like especially to thank my husband and children, who encouraged me throughout the process of writing this book. In addition, I would like to thank all the researchers and theoreticians who shared their ideas and knowledge with the world and contributed to my understanding of the core meaning of mediation and thinking development.

Preface

My understanding that everyone is capable of developing independent thinking skills once they have been guided on how to do so was developed many years before I officially became a teacher, an educator and a mediator. Throughout the three years of high school, once a week, I volunteered as a caregiver of a child who was diagnosed with autism. Although professionals decided that he would not be able to communicate in any way, his parents refused to accept this diagnosis and decided to invite a variety of caregivers who would stimulate him to communicate in different ways. Step by step, it worked and communication slowly developed. Back then I thought it was a miracle, later in life I understood it was mediation. Another revelation I experienced was after a few years, as a teacher, during a workshop with Prof. Reuven Feuerstein, who clarified for me the role of the mediator throughout mediatees’ thinking development and opened the door for me to the world of mediation.

Mediation theories were developed for many years to emphasise society’s responsibility towards the success of learning among all children, even though the term mediation was usually not used. Out of the several twentieth-century learning theories, I have chosen five main theoreticians who approached learning from different perspectives, at different times and in different cultures. The five theories I will focus on in this book are those developed by Dewey, Piaget, Vygotsky, Feuerstein and Gardner. All five theories include environment, schools and parents in the process of children’s learning and thinking development, and they all share the view that children’s thinking can be modified. In addition, key results from research in the field of neuropedagogy will be presented to strengthen these theoretical attitudes, since we know today that the brain actually changes as a result of social interactions and interventions. Each perspective discussed here represents a different understanding of society’s role in education. Moreover, although these theoreticians did not know each other, their different views of society’s role as responsible for all children’s development, is the link that may provide educators with a wider and more professional basis for better mediation.

While each theoretician believes that his/her theory will be the one to solve most of the dilemmas of education, this book intends to offer practical integration of several existing mediation theories. It offers a unique model that integrates different approaches from different periods that can be used effectively by mediators and educators today. Nevertheless, I invite each of the readers to look for other theories and possibilities that also encourage integrating mediation for thinking development.

This book offers an opportunity to better understand the role of mediation in an era of dynamic social and cultural changes that influence education, in order to better prepare the next generation to become part of society. Hundreds of years ago, ever since leaders of society began to understand the concept of education, the common goal of all was to better educate people in order to make them a productive part of their society in the future. As a result of this broad goal, various approaches to education were developed in order to help individuals become better learners. In other words, theoreticians and researchers studied the human mind and thinking processes in order to develop better and more efficient learning models.

Mediation, as mentioned, is a process that promotes learning as a result of learner interactions with the environment. Without reducing the importance of classic learning models, nowadays other goals are at the forefront of the education processes: teachers do not need to keep focussing only on teaching specific disciplines; they also need to focus on knowledge that will be useful in students’ future. In addition, students are judged on their achievements in school rather than on their understanding and their thinking development and parents try to help their children excel at school rather than excel as members of society. Although the goals of learning knowledge and reaching new achievements are important, teachers and educators should understand how to mediate knowledge acquisition rather than be the source of knowledge.

Mediation processes as mandatory components in education allow all participants to develop better thinking processes. The ideas about mediation are wide and cover all areas of life. Therefore, being a great teacher or educator are only two facets of the mediation approach. This book will allow all readers to better understand the concept of mediation, following with ideas to practice it, and thereby become true mediators.