The aim of this chapter is to consider the intertwining of social and cognitive aspects of learning through interactive activities, in order to explore how the two aspects are interrelated in children's joint work. Focusing on participants' talk while they are asked to solve together a reading comprehension task and to agree on a joint answer, we highlight the ways in which the process of dialogical construction of a common answer is influenced by social and cognitive factors. In particular, we problematize the interplay of multiple aspects (cognitive, personal, interpersonal) that structure interactions among peers in order to focus on the regulation of social relations during children's discussions and its interplay with cognitive dimensi...
The aim of this study was to re-examine the hypotheses of Mugny & Doise (1978). Seventy-seven presch...
Children are good at interacting with and exploring new situations. Probably at first sight, childre...
This study investigated first-, third-, and fifth-grade children's talk about three types of te...
This article comes from work carried out within a workshop co-ordinated by Sorsana and Trognon at th...
In recent years there has been a growing research interest in the social nature of knowledge (e.g. D...
In classrooms each day children are crafting intricate social arrangements as they read in the compa...
This study examined emergent readers\u27 paired reading interactions. The teacher/researcher in this...
This study investigated how children collaborated with their peers to read informational texts and c...
In this paper, we address the need to develop an empirically-based understanding of the use of dialo...
This research investigates the rational quality of students ’ discussion of literary texts. An ideal...
M.Ed. (Educational Psychology)Abstract: Reading is an integral part of learning and knowing througho...
Children learn better when they are allowed to talk among themselves, and help each other with the p...
This microgenetic study investigates the process by which children’s relational thinking develops th...
This study aims to understand the construction of multilink causal reasoning chains during collabora...
Background. A Vygotskian framework links cognitive change to collaborative interaction with a more ...
The aim of this study was to re-examine the hypotheses of Mugny & Doise (1978). Seventy-seven presch...
Children are good at interacting with and exploring new situations. Probably at first sight, childre...
This study investigated first-, third-, and fifth-grade children's talk about three types of te...
This article comes from work carried out within a workshop co-ordinated by Sorsana and Trognon at th...
In recent years there has been a growing research interest in the social nature of knowledge (e.g. D...
In classrooms each day children are crafting intricate social arrangements as they read in the compa...
This study examined emergent readers\u27 paired reading interactions. The teacher/researcher in this...
This study investigated how children collaborated with their peers to read informational texts and c...
In this paper, we address the need to develop an empirically-based understanding of the use of dialo...
This research investigates the rational quality of students ’ discussion of literary texts. An ideal...
M.Ed. (Educational Psychology)Abstract: Reading is an integral part of learning and knowing througho...
Children learn better when they are allowed to talk among themselves, and help each other with the p...
This microgenetic study investigates the process by which children’s relational thinking develops th...
This study aims to understand the construction of multilink causal reasoning chains during collabora...
Background. A Vygotskian framework links cognitive change to collaborative interaction with a more ...
The aim of this study was to re-examine the hypotheses of Mugny & Doise (1978). Seventy-seven presch...
Children are good at interacting with and exploring new situations. Probably at first sight, childre...
This study investigated first-, third-, and fifth-grade children's talk about three types of te...