Meanings Are Acquired From Experiencing Differences Against A Background Of Sameness, Rather Than From Experiencing Sameness Against A Background Of Difference: Putting A Conjecture To The Test By Embedding It In A Pedagogical Tool

Abstract

In helping learners to make a novel meaning their own, such as when helping children to understand what a word means or teaching students a new concept in school, we frequently point to examples that share the aimed-at meaning but differ otherwise. This type of approach rests on the assumption that novel meanings can be acquired through the experience of sameness against a background of difference. This paper argues that this assumption is unfounded and that the opposite is the case: we make novel meanings our own through the experience of differences against a background of sameness. We put this conjecture to the test in an experimental study by embedding it in a computer game and the results support the conjecture.link_to_OA_fulltex

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Last time updated on 01/06/2016

This paper was published in HKU Scholars Hub.

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