1996 Davis B & Sumara D & Kieren T Cognition Co Emergence Curriculum
1996 Davis B & Sumara D & Kieren T Cognition Co Emergence Curriculum
1996 Davis B & Sumara D & Kieren T Cognition Co Emergence Curriculum
Cognition, co‐emergence,
curriculum
A. Brent Davis , Dennis J. Sumara & Thomas E. Kieren
Published online: 29 Sep 2006.
To cite this article: A. Brent Davis , Dennis J. Sumara & Thomas E. Kieren (1996)
Cognition, co‐emergence, curriculum, Journal of Curriculum Studies, 28:2, 151-169, DOI:
10.1080/0022027980280203
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J. CURRICULUM STUDIES, 1996, VOL. 28, NO. 2, 1 5 1 - 1 6 9
components of curriculum action (e.g. students, teachers, texts and processes) are
understood to exist in a dynamic and mutually specifying relationship. Drawn from
studies in biology, ecology, cognition, phenomenology and contemporary philosophical
hermeneutics, this theory of co-emergence is used to analyse two classroom interactions:
an elementary school lesson on fractions and a secondary school unit on the topic of
anti-racism. Through these examples, the co-emergent and intertwining natures
of knowledge (individual and collective) and identity (individual and collective) are
explored. The paper concludes with a discussion of how a conception of curriculum as
a co-emergent phenomenon can help us to overcome the unhelpful dichotomies that
tend to be enacted in both child- and subject-centred pedagogies.
One half
Jnd three
sixteenths 10 . 1 _ n
ii
•
Tasha's Solution Sarah's Solution Jiema's Solution
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1.1. 1 . 1 .
T l T f T5 + 3Z + 10 +
. 1 0 - -5 +. 1 -1 0 -0 . 5-1
T T r T T T T
l +
. l . +l . l
2.5 ? I T 2T6+5T2
These examples provide some limited sense of the range of the students'
answers. In this paper we explore this sort of diversity of action, asking:
'How does it arise?' and, 'How might its presence affect the way we think
about curriculum?'.
Our starting point is to challenge a few of the premises that seem to
underlie the activities of many curriculum makers. We question, for example,
the convictions that learning outcomes should be pre-specified and that, once
such objectives are selected, learning sequences can be devised to ensure that
they are effectively achieved. In brief, two pervasive-and we believe
troublesome-'assumptions' 2 seem to be almost universally enacted in
schools: first, that we are able to identify the skills and the knowledge
COGNITION, CO-EMERGENCE, CURRICULUM 153
that learners will need to become full participants in society and, second, that
learning is controllable.
Evidence for these assumptions can be found in our everyday language.
Consider, for example, our pervasive use of computer metaphors in
characterizing cognition. Learning and thought are often described as
matters of inputting, processing and retrieving data. From this perspective,
cognition is thought to be about acquiring appropriate (inner) representa-
tions of some pre-given (outer) reality. Such orientations to curriculum and
to cognition undergird programmes of study that seek out convergence rather
than embracing diversity. The question, ' i + •§• = ?' for example, especially
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is not determined or instructed by the wind or the gentle push we may give it. The way
it sounds has more to do with the kinds of structural configurations it has when it
receives a perturbation or imbalance. Every mobile will have a typical melody and tone
proper to its constitution. In other words, it is obvious from this example that in order
to understand the sound patterns we hear, we turn to the nature of the chimes and not
to the wind that hits them.
As we listen to a chime, it is easy to think that its sound is causedhy the wind.
However, as Varela argues, it is more powerful (and indeed more
explanatory) to think of the sound as resulting from the structure of the wind
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while at the same time effecting their own structures. In a phrase, they and
their world were co-emerging.
mathematical understanding? Was her answer just a guess? Or did she have
some sophisticated understanding of mathematics that she was unable to
translate into oral expression? If we believe that thought is somehow separate
from action we would be led to believe that Tasha really did not know the
mathematical concept being explored. Being unable to explain her cognitive
process would suggest that she is merely guessing. If, however, we believe
that doing is knowing, and that unformulated knowledge/action is as much
a part of the identity of the learner as formulated knowledge, we will believe
that, in fact, Tasha is thinking/acting/being mathematical.
We do not wish to overstate the point by claiming that curriculum
theorists have been ignoring the role of the body in learning. The increasingly
popular constructivist epistemologies, for example, make this same point.
In particular, radical constructivism (von Glasersfeld 1984) has identified as
its subject/object of study the individual's cognition. But while such
cognition is based on, and drawn out of experience in an environment, the
interactional dynamics with the environment are only considered from the
point of view of the individual. Similarly, while social interaction is seen as
a contributor to cognition, it is not considered in its own right, but only in
terms of the felt constraints on the individual. Thus, while constructivism
has given us the basis for insight into individual cognition, it has proved an
inadequate framework for (albeit although an important contributor to) the
re-interpretation of teaching. Simply put, constructivism does not invite or
enable us to address such critical issues as our tremendous interactive
capacities, our complex social situations, or the moral/ethical dimensions of
schooling.7 As such, it is of limited value-and might even be argued to be
counterproductive 8 -in discussions of teaching and education.
This point might be illustrated by comparing the constructivist's and the
enactivist's answers to the question, 'What is the role of the teacher?'.
The former might put it as follows: the student constructs the knowledge;
the teacher constructs the student. In other words, the teacher actively builds
a model of the learner's knowing as the learner, in response to a host of
influences and experiences, builds his/her conceptualizations. While these
coincidental constructive activities are clearly interrelated and dynamically
reciprocal, there is a sense that each of the participants is engaged in
constructing a reality which is, in the end, unavoidably subjective.
Enactivism, in departing from constructivism, does not focus so
exclusively on the individual's actions nor solely on the individual's
structural dynamics. Emerging from its affiliation with contemporary
ecological thought, the subject of investigation is not the child but, to
COGNITION, CO-EMERGENCE, CURRICULUM 157
have alerted us, we cannot think of subjects and objects as unities that
are coincidental but independent. Far from merely existing relatively
autonomously in the same location, individual and environment continually
specify one another. Just as I am shaped by my location, so is my location
shaped by my presence.10
This has long been the view of hermeneutical understanding espoused
first by Heidegger (1962) and later by Gadamer (1990), Ricoeur (1984) and
others. Hermeneutical understanding continually seeks to excavate the
ever-evolving conditions which make understanding possible. This does not
mean that causes for understanding are sought; rather understanding is
understood as a continuous cycle of re-vision and re-interpretation. Learning
something new depends upon knowing something; at the same time new
knowledge helps to re-shape old knowledge. It is a circle of experience of
understanding which has indiscernible beginning- or end-points.
When students and teacher are thought of as part of their context (rather
than in a context) we can begin to see that one or the other does not cause
action or knowing or identity for the other. Rather, the students and the
teacher are seen as bringing forth a world together; the teacher's actions are
determined by his or her own dynamic structure, but are also occasioned by
the interactional dynamics with students as they bring forth (i.e. quite
literally, help to shape) the world. From this perspective, the teacher is not
understood as shaping a student's thought, action and/or identity. Rather,
the teacher participates with the students in the bringing forth of a world of
understanding. While the teacher and the students have different histories,
and hence bring forth and reflect the world differently, enactivism suggests
that the teacher and the students are working on a common project-the
simultaneous bringing forth of themselves and the world-even if their
respective interpretations of their actions and experiences differ.
This view of learning as 'bringing forth' acting, knowing identities which
co-specify one another helps us to understand that the school curriculum
does not and cannot exist apart from the world. It cannot-indeed, must
not —be thought of as a collection of learning objectives intended to prepare
a person for the world, simply because the mere act of teaching contributes
to the dynamic, unpredictable, complex unfolding of an as-yet unrealized
world. This formulation, however, presents us with a conundrum: How
can we prepare a student for a world that, in part as a result of our efforts
in such preparation, will be much different from the world in which we
currently find ourselves?
By intervening-by educating-we affect not just learners, but the
158 A. B. DAVIS ET AL.
situations that surround those learners. It is thus that Varela's (1992: 61)
characterization of living as 'laying down a path in walking' (versus following
a pre-specified path) applies not just to the individual, not just to the realm
of human action, but to the entire biosphere: 'Many paths of change are
potentially possible, and which one is selected is an expression of the
particular kind of structural coherence the unit has, in a continuous
tinkering'.
'I' am not distinct from 'you'; 'us' cannot be separated from what is
thought to be 'not-us'. In fact rather than thinking in terms of us and not-us
we prefer to encode the inextricable nature of world and person as the unity
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'racism' and 'bigotry'. The term, rather, refers to our way of seeing or
interpreting situations-ways that are conditioned by a history of acting and
living in particular historically effected social settings. While it is true that
prejudices limit what we are able to see, it is also true that, were it not for
our prejudices (our pre-judgements), we would not be able to see at all.
This point is well illustrated in Sacks's (1993) account of a middle-aged
blind person whose sight, after nearly a lifetime of blindness, was restored
through a cataract operation. On the day his bandages were removed, Virgil
did not (as we might expect) jump up and exclaim, 'I can see!'. Although he
was aware of a profusion of light and colour, his history of blindness meant
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For Alena and others who had experienced racism in their lives, the reading
of the novel became a powerful commentary on their lived experience. They
were able to understand the world differently for having read. However, it
seemed that for most of those who suggested that racism did not exist in their
lives or in their school/community, the book had little (if any) emotional fuse
to it. Although they understoodwhat the text was saying, and could effectively
participate as readers, they did not see what was outside their structural
possibilities.
This is an elaboration of one of our earlier points —that we are
structure-determined beings. We are only capable of responding in the ways
our structures permit. The result of a curricular intervention is not
COGNITION, CO-EMERGENCE, CURRICULUM 161
I didn't really catch onto the book until after Tony had spoken to us. It was weird- like,
I was able to understand what the book was saying after listening to him talk to us about
what it was like to be gay. When I think of the book now, I think of some of the things
that Tony said and how all of a sudden I understand how life was for him-how difficult
it was.
Kelsey's response was not unique. Many others who had not been able to
re-read their own histories of experience in relation to their experience of
reading The Chrysalids were able to do so after Tony's class visit. These
're-interpretations', it is important to state, occurred in the absence of any
in-class re-readings of the novel itself; yet, it became clear that a form of
re-reading had, indeed, occurred. As Kelsey, and others, began to re-visit
their reading of the book in relation to other curriculum events (including
Tony's talk) they began to re-configure the structure of their experience.
And, as they did so, what they knew began to change. Further, as Ingrid later
reported, what they did seemed also to change. During the weeks following
this anti-hatred unit, Kelsey, and others, seemed to act differently and, in
conversations with Ingrid, demonstrated a new awareness of racism as it was
enacted in their lives.
What can these events help us to understand about curriculum?
162 A. B. DAVIS ET AL.
rocks and trees and other things. Yet the water does not really ever stand before us.
Scarcely a drop stays there for the length of one glance. The material composition of
the waterfall changes all the time; only the form is permanent and what gives any shape
at all to the water is the motion. The waterfall exhibits a form of motion, or a dynamic
form.
'The material composition of the waterfall changes all the time; only the form
is permanent'. The waterfall is a 'form of motion', 'a dynamic form',
'a structure'-continuously changing, always different, yet maintaining an
integrity which allows us to recognize it as the same waterfall. Its form is
neither determined by the flowing water nor by the surrounding landscape,
but it arises in the interactive dynamic of these structures. Moreover, as these
structures interact in complex and unpredictable ways, each shapes the other,
constantly presenting new possibilities for action as they proceed.
We might add that attempts to explain the form of the waterfall by delving
into the river's history, by examining the nature of a water molecule, or by
exploring the current shape of the land would profit us little. (Even so, an
understanding of the falls is incomplete without such knowledge.) We must,
rather, focus our attentions on the structural dynamic-the form of
motion-of the phenomenon. The same is true of curriculum. As Grumet
(1988: 172) explains:
Curriculum is a moving form. That is why we have trouble capturing it, fixing it in
language, lodging it in our matrix. Whether we talk about it as history, as syllabi, as
classroom discourse, as intended learning outcomes, or as experience, we are trying to
grasp a moving form, to catch it at the moment that it slides from being thefigure,the
object and goal of action, and collapses into the ground of action.
It is not easy for us to talk about moving forms and dynamic structures; it
seems that it is the nature of our language to freeze, to fix, to isolate and to
present in one-word-after-the-other a thread of some interpretation of the
world. The same fixing and sequencing tendencies are evident in our
interpretations of classroom activities. First we prepare to read by gathering
together the relevant background information; then we read; we check
comprehension; we discuss; we write about it—one-thing-after-the-other,
lock-step. In itself, this is not problematic-we may well be incapable of
conceiving of our dynamic universe in any other terms. What is troublesome
is forgetting that the underlying phenomenon is far more complex.
Experiences are not linear, unidirectional, incremental and cumulative.
Rather, they wander, they move backward and forward, they progress in fits
and starts. They are transformative, complex and unpredictable. Curriculum
is one such form. Like Berthoff's (1990) description of the process of writing,
COGNITION, CO-EMERGENCE, CURRICULUM 163
Bodies of knowledge
A quality of enactivist theory that might be drawn from the two classroom
examples already presented is that this interpretive framework can be used
to study action and knowledge at two very different conceptual levels - that
164 A. B. DAVIS ET AL.
answers (and the thinking that supported those answers) became ever more
diverse and complex.
The overall function of the embodied curriculum, then, is not to limit
possibilities by selecting optimal traits (which have been determined in
advance of the lived experience of curriculum), but rather to discard those
which seem obviously destructive to the curricular community. This may be
considered a 'good enough' theory of curriculum, where the goal is to
uncover not what is ideal, but what is possible. Of course, when the
relationships among students, teachers and subject-matter are considered in
this way, we must be prepared to face a much more ambiguous set of
curricular—relations which would be uncomfortable in a world that expects
clear limits and boundaries.
What is curriculum?
Notes
The Fraction Kits in this case consisted of standard sheets of paper cut into halves, fourths,
eighths, and sixteenth pieces. See Kieren, Davis and Mason (forthcoming) for an
elaborated description.
This word is set apart from the text by quotation marks because we do not wish to imply
that the 'assumptions' to which we refer are deliberately construed and clearly articulated.
Rather, they form part of our 'commonsense', affecting the way we act, but not necessarily
formulated or readily available to consciousness.
168 A. B. DAVIS ET AL.
3. Maturana and Varela first presented this idea in Autopoesis and Cognition (1980) and later
in The Tree of Knowledge (1987). Varela, along with Thompson and Rosch (1991), has
since elaborated on these ideas.
4. We are deliberately conflating the body and the self here.
5. To be more accurate, the body/self is not really a thing that undergoes change. It is rather
better understood in terms of the process of change itself.
6. Following Varela et al. (1991) we will be using the term 'enactivism' to refer to the
theoretical framework that we are using. We hope the appropriateness of the term
becomes clear as this paper unfolds.
7. Ernest (1991) has offered 'social constructivism' as a socially minded alternative to
radical constructivism. While this understanding of constructivism more explicitly
acknowledges the social construction of knowledge, it still fails to acknowledge the
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inextricability of knower from known. In effect, the idea that the world and its subjects
function and evolve simultaneously remains unacknowledged.
8. To elaborate, let us look to the field of mathematics education research. Few current
research reports fail to acknowledge an allegiance to this epistemological perspective-a
fact that is troublesome because, in spite of the 'revolution' it has inspired, constructivism
has done little to bring forward the political, gender, racial and other social biases that
are implicit (enacted) in the subject-matter, in the teaching practices, and in the simple
fact that mathematics is situated at the core of the modern curriculum.
9. We have joined the components of these dyads to represent visually a fundamental
inseparability of one part from the other.
10. Lovelock (1979) develops this idea and extends it to the level of planetary dynamics.
11. Sadly, Virgil's story ends quite tragically. Unable to cope with the changes demanded to
live a sighted life, Virgil fell into depression and became agnostic—psychically blind-not
long after the operation.
12. Pirie and Kieren (1994) argue that even if the children were imitating one another, such
actions would be seen as structure determined. That is, without a certain history of
experience or elements in one's structure, one cannot even copy or duplicate the work
of another, much less replicate it, and thus make it an element of one's own cognitive
action.
13. From this point in the paper on, 'embodied' is used to signify the inextricability of
body/mind and of bodies of knowledge/physiological bodies.
14. Gadamer (1990) elaborates on this idea in Truth and Method.
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COGNITION, CO-EMERGENCE, CURRICULUM 169