Heidi Carlone
- Teacher Education and Higher Education
- Associate Professor, 2007
- Professor, 2015
Situated learning: Legitimate peripheral participation by Jean Lave & Etienne Wenger
This book transformed the ways that I conceptualize learning.
Historically, science educators have viewed learning as a purely
psychological process. Lave and Wenger's book is part of a
watershed movement that challenged those purely psychological
views of learning. Situated cognition implies that students' learning
depends on how social practices allow students to participate in
them-- in what times and spaces, with what tools or
representations, with what goals or endpoints. What this means is
that the focus of educational research becomes less about the
individual and more about the social practices that allow the
individual to become a member of the community. Though the
book is not specifically about science education (my field), Lave
and Wenger's concepts of "community of practice," "identity", and
"legitimate peripheral participation" are central to re-thinking what
science education is-- and what science education could be.