1st Edition

Scaffolding A Special Issue of the Journal of the Learning Sciences

Edited By Elizabeth A. Davis, Naomi Miyake Copyright 2004
    192 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    This special issue works toward refining the understanding of a construct that has had a name for nearly 30 years and has been used by educators of all stripes for centuries. The introduction lays the groundwork for discussing the issues addressed throughout. Each of the papers address different aspects of a similar problem: How can we conceptualize, design, and assess the effects of scaffolding when it is implemented in a complex classroom system? The first article addresses a core problem in conceptualizing scaffolding: What are the specific goals of scaffolding provided in software tools? The next paper extends this consideration of how scaffolding mechanisms can complement each other and explores issues having to do with the complex settings in which scaffolding is used. A framework which synthesizes theoretical and design work done in cognitive science, psychology, educational technology, science education, and the learning sciences over the last three decades is the topic of the third paper. The final article presents a new method for analyzing the effects of scaffolding. This special issues closes with commentary covering different components of a definition of scaffolding, including the "what, why, and how" of scaffolding.

    Volume 13, Number 3, 2004
    Contents:
    GUEST EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION: E.A. Davis, N. Miyake, Explorations of Scaffolding in Complex Classroom Systems. ARTICLES: B.J. Reiser, Scaffolding Complex Learning: The Mechanisms of Structuring and Problematizing Student Work. I. Tabak, Synergy: A Complement to Emerging Patterns of Distributed Scaffolding. C. Quintana, B.J. Reiser, E.A. Davis, J. Krajcik, E. Fretz, R.G. Duncan, E. Kyza, D. Edelson, E. Soloway, A Scaffolding Design Framework for Software to Support Science Inquiry. B. Sherin, B.J. Reiser, D. Edelson, Scaffolding Analysis: Extending the Scaffolding Metaphor to Learning Artifacts. COMMENTARY: R.D. Pea, The Social and Technological Dimensions of Scaffolding and Related Theoretical Concepts for Learning, Education, and Human Activity.

    Biography

    Naomi Miyake, Elizabeth A. Davis