Ourselves: Why We Are Who We Are



Ourselves: Why We Are Who We Are
This book is about how people come to be who they are and how their experiences shape who they are. It discusses how language and technology play a role in shaping who we are. It is a book that will be of interest to educators, researchers, and professionals in the fields of literacy education, psychology of reading, learning theory, human learning, and educational psychology. more details
Key Features:
  • This book discusses how people come to be who they are and how their experiences shape who they are
  • It discusses how language and technology play a role in shaping who we are
  • It is a book that will be of interest to educators, researchers, and professionals in the fields of literacy education, psychology of reading, learning theory, human learning, and educational psychology


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Features
Author Frank Smith
ISBN 9780805859553
Publisher Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
Manufacturer Lawrence Erlbaum Associates
Description
This book is about how people come to be who they are and how their experiences shape who they are. It discusses how language and technology play a role in shaping who we are. It is a book that will be of interest to educators, researchers, and professionals in the fields of literacy education, psychology of reading, learning theory, human learning, and educational psychology.

This book delves into how we come to terms with ourselves, with other people, and with the world in general. It is about how we come to be what we are, and to think the way we do. It is a book about influences on this process. A particular influence to which Smith gives central consideration is language, not just in terms of the communicative networks in which it engages us-the information" that presents itself to us-but in the largely unsuspected framework for thought that lies within language itself. He also considers deeply the role of technology. This is a book of description, not of explanations-these are two quite different intellectual territories. Smith writes about what can be observed, not philosophized about. Thus he does not discuss the inner workings of the human brain. His claim is that what he is interested in-thinking, learning, understanding, remembering-have never been found in the brain. The aim is to describe the scope and limits for how we can be seen to think, learn, understand, and remember-but not to "explain" such behavior by recourse to hypothetical inner entities. Ourselves speaks especially to educators. It outlines the possibilities and limitations inherent in all of us. It delineates who we are, but also stresses that no two people are the same, that what we become depends on our journeys in life and the people we encounter on the way. The formal part of learning that is called education is particularly sensitive to the role of people who organize critical experiences for us, our teachers. The brief summaries at the end of each chapter reinforce and highlight points that are of particular relevance to teachers. Researchers, professionals, and graduate students across the fields of literacy education, psychology of reading, learning theory, human learning, educational psychology, and psycholinguistics will find this book compelling.
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