Development of verbal thinking and problem-solving among TshiVenda-speaking primary school children

Authors

  • Azwihangwisi E. Muthivhi University of Cape Town

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.38140/pie.v31i2.1802

Keywords:

Vygotsky, verbal thinking, classification, cognitive development

Abstract

The paper presents findings of primary school children’s performance on classification and generalisation tasks to demonstrate the fundamental connection between their verbal thinking processes and problemsolving, on the one hand, and the practical activities of their society and culture, on the other. The results reveal that, although children generally classify (or group) objects in ways that suggest abstract categorical relations, they in fact employ heterogeneous thought processes rather than simply employing either concrete-functional or abstract-theoretical modes of thinking. In addition to the concrete and abstract modes, a third cognitive mode termed abstract-functional mode is posited as revealing the fundamental connection between verbal thinking processes and the modalities of the specific sociocultural context of these children’s learning and development. The findings have crucial implications for children’s schooling and curriculum development, as they call for classroom pedagogy that accounts for, and interrogates the heterogeneous nature of children’s thinking and conceptual development.

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Published

2013-06-28

How to Cite

Muthivhi, A. E. (2013). Development of verbal thinking and problem-solving among TshiVenda-speaking primary school children. Perspectives in Education, 31(2), 22–32. https://doi.org/10.38140/pie.v31i2.1802

Issue

Section

Research articles