Using Mediational Means during Learning and Understanding of Proof Assignments from Theory of Computation

Author(s):  
Christiane Frede
Relay Journal ◽  
2019 ◽  
pp. 17-26
Author(s):  
Tetsushi Ohara

Approaches to understanding learner autonomy in language learning often contain dichotomous views: those that emphasize individual attributes and those that emphasize social influence. In order to articulate our understanding of learner autonomy, it is necessary to find approaches, which view a dialectic unity between the individualistic views and the social views. Sociocultural theory based on the concept of mediation is an approach, which has potential to offer a unique way to analyze learner autonomy. While using sociocultural theory as the main theoretical framework, this article attempts to understand how students take charge of their learning in the language classroom. Qualitative data indicate that interpersonal relationships between students work as mediational means for students to engage in their learning in the classroom. From this finding, it is argued that by understanding mediational means that students employ and are appropriate in the classroom, we are better able to track the students’ ability to take charge of their own learning.


2013 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul White

AbstractI was given a Kindle e-reader as a Christmas present in 2011. It got me thinking about the mediational means associated with reading. Then it got me thinking about the role books actually play as physical objects in describing our identities. The books on our shelves define us to a certain extent; the books we are seen reading in public suggests to others what kind of person we might be. The Book Lover was the poem that emerged, alonsgside other things. Around the same time, a copy of ‘Sing me the Creation’ by Paul Matthews was lying on a coffee table at a friend’s house. The cover features the 1810 painting ‘Adam naming the beasts’ by William Blake. I wrote First Monday as soon as I got home. Would that have happened if there had only been a Kindle on the coffee table?


Leonardo ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 40 (4) ◽  
pp. 392-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan E. Brennan

The author has researched and developed a theory of computation for caricature and has implemented this theory as an interactive computer graphics program. The Caricature Generator program is used to create caricatures by amplifying the differences between the face to be caricatured and a comparison face. This continuous, parallel amplification of facial features on the computer screen simulates the visualization process in the imagination of the caricaturist. The result is a recognizable, animated caricature, generated by computer and mediated by an individual who may or may not have facility for drawing, but who, like most human beings, is expert at visualizing and recognizing faces.


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