Monday, November 25, 2013

Essay: The Cognitive Divide: Origins and Criticism

                                             The Cognitive Divide: Origins and Criticism

The ability to write standard academic English and to produce a logical written argument have together defined what it is to be truly literate, at least since the Enlightenment. The source of the notion goes much farther back, however, to Western civilization’s Greek roots. In fact, ancient Greece of the 8th century BC inspired a view of literacy that took hold a half century ago, stemming from the idea that the emergence of alphabetic writing caused a dramatic and thorough change in human thought, a kind of cognitive divide. In the past three decades, however, other scholars have found it to be an inadequate model for understanding literacy, and they have proposed other theories they believe to be more accurate and useful.
Social anthropologist Jack Goody is the scholar most closely associated with the cognitive divide theory of literacy. It originated with his 1977 work, “Domestication of the Savage Mind,” in which he weighs in on the great divide theories current at the time, those that sought to make distinctions between the primitive and the civilized mind. According to a reexamination by scholars Michael and Jennifer Cole (2006), Goody argued against such a duality, finding in his own ethnographic work with non-literate societies in Ghana, that people who could not read or write still did exercise critical faculties and independent thought. Goody then, however, goes on to introduce a divide of his own, one he developed further in “The Consequences of Literacy,” a paper he co-authored with Ian Watt. Goody and Watt claim that writing profoundly changes the cognitive abilities of those who use it and that shift triggers significant social changes as well. First, they examine the differences between oral societies and those in which writing is commonplace, what they define as literacy. Oral societies, they claim, live in a mythic world and in mythic time, passing down their cultural histories and heritage verbally from person to person. This form of transmission allows the editing out—consciously or unconsciously—of what no longer serves to keep the community intact and unchanged, a condition they call “cultural homeostatis.” Goody and Watt then look to ancient Greece in the sixth century BC and the emergence of alphabetic script for the first time in human history. They contend that the spread of literacy transformed thought throughout the culture, replacing myth with history; giving birth to logic, rhetoric and reasoned discourse; and generating the disciplines of science and philosophy. In contrast to the cultural homeostatis of non-literate societies, ancient Greece, and by extension other societies that become literate, value challenge and change. When readers can observe inconsistencies between received wisdom and the written record or between one text and another, they become skeptical and develop thoughts independently of given wisdom. Ultimately, Goody and Watt claimed, this transformation led to the development of more complex social institutions and democratic self-governing. Writing, in their description, is valuable in and of itself, but also because it is linked qualitatively to a particular developmental arc and social outcome.
Walter J. Ong is another scholar associated with the cognitive divide notion of literacy. In his paper “Writing is a Technology that Structures Thought,” as the title suggests, he focuses on the technology of writing and its effects on cognition. Writing, in this view, is the technology of intellect. Like Goody and Watt, Ong closely examines the differences between oral communication and written communication, seeking to understand how each shapes consciousness. Ong believes one of the key distinctions of writing is that it is diaeretic—it separates. Writing separates the word from sound, the source of the communication from its recipient, the past from the present, academic learning from wisdom, high society from low, even the knower from the known. Still, Ong believes writing is an advancement in human history, claiming that even as writing separates, it allows humans to “know” they are separate, to become conscious of it, and in so doing to become more fully human.
Goody, Watt, and Ong share a focus on the individual and on the role that writing has played historically in shaping and valuing the individual separate from the background community. Once knowledge was no longer dependent on person-to-person contact, once skepticism became the norm, and once dispassionate discourse—logic—was prized, the reader became empowered to create his or her own form of knowledge. The focus on the individual was a key component of the school of literacy that became associated with the great divide, the autonomous theory of literacy.
British scholar Brian Street disagreed wholeheartedly with Goody and others’ orientation toward a cognitive divide orientation approach to literacy but it was he who gave it its name. In his book “Literacy in Theory and Practice,” Street called it “autonomous” because of its focus on print literacy alone but more so because it saw those skills as separate from the practitioner’s social context. The autonomous, or neoclassical, approach sees literacy above all as the technical skill of learning to decode and encode texts. The learner’s success or failure at that enterprise is viewed as a matter of individual motivation and desire to assimilate into the dominant society. (Wiley/2005) While professing to be politically and socially neutral, this approach tracks with and favors the development of western society, with its traditional notions of progress, civilization, and upward social mobility.
Street attacks the foundation of Goody and Watt’s argument, their focus on the transformative effect of alphabetic writing in ancient Greece, arguing that there were other social and economic changes and forces at play at the time. Similarly, he calls the unique value placed on writing to be a kind of “technological determinism” that suggests cultures who learn to write follow a predictable path, again ignoring the true complexity of social forces at play as literacy is adopted by different cultures. Street also finds the claim that the Greeks developed logic to be Eurocentric, ignoring the achievements of the Egyptians, Chinese, Indians, and others.
Many scholars who find fault with the autonomous view of literacy point out that is it virtually impossible to test the cognitive divide theory since most cultures, including our own, are a blend of oral and print. In addition, most literates have been to school, so it becomes difficult to filter out the cognitive effects of writing from the effect of schooling. Social psychologists Sylvia Scribner and Michael Cole demonstrated these claims in their work with the Vai people of Liberia during the 1970’s. The Vai retained many of the traditions of oral culture, spoke several languages, and had developed a unique writing system, yet there was no widespread schooling, no public writing, and many were also illiterate.  In studying a culture with such a range of literacy-associated habits, Scribner and Cole found there was little psychological difference between those who could write and those who couldn’t. Instead, they found that what mattered psychologically and cognitively, what engaged or did not engage higher orders of thinking, was the uses that people made of their literacy skills. Their work helped create a paradigm shift in the field toward an approach that came to be known as the social practices model of literacy. (Wiley/2005)
Scholars of the social practices approach believe that literacy practices have a variety of functions and purposes within different social activities, groups, and cultures. They focus less on the individual and the acquisition of discreet skills, and more on the many different ways in which people use or engage with language, particularly written language, in their everyday lives. Their view of literacy activities is broad, including everything from reading a novel to reading a “Sell by” date on a milk carton, and from writing a text message to navigating a web page. According to the social practices view, there are many varieties of literacies, depending on their purposes and contexts. Train literacy, for instance, includes not only reading the train schedule but also understanding all the behavioral habits and social organization involved with taking a train in a particular place and time. (Papen/2005)
James Paul Gee and Paulo Freire go further, arguing that literacy practices must also be seen as part of a context of power and privilege. As a consequence, and in contrast to the autonomous view of literacy, the social practices approach seeks to dignify the literacy learner by understanding and respecting the language practices they bring to the enterprise, while allowing those embedded skills to be engaged as a platform for learning new skills. (Wiley/2005; Rivera/Huerata-Macias/2010). This understanding supports the social practices view that their approach toward literacy has a better chance of success in teaching traditional literacy skills—reading and writing—to those who have non-traditional literacy skills both here in the United States and around the world. (Papen/2005)           
Scholars and practitioners have spent the past several decades refuting the cognitive divide theory of literacy and developing the social practices model in its place. The cognitive divide theory reflected centuries of western thought about history, the social order, and a single view of the value of reading and writing. But as the world has grown smaller, as scholars have studied different cultures more closely, and as that dispassionate discourse so prized by traditionalists has been brought to bear on the study of literacy itself, a social practices approach came to be viewed as more appropriate and applicable to a wider group of places and cultures. The introduction of newer, digital technologies would seem only to underscore its value in an increasingly multi-modal, multi-literate world.

Bibliography
Cole, Jennifer and Michael Cole. “Rethinking the Goody Myth.” Technology, Literacy,
 and the Evolution of Society: Implications of the Work of Jack Goody. Ed. David
R. Olson. New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2006. 305-324.

Goody, J. and I Watt 1968: “The Consequences of Literacy.” Comparative Studies in
Society and History 5.3 (1963): 304-345. Web. 13 October 2013

Ong, Walter J., S.J. “Writing is a Technology that Restructures Thought.” Literacy: A
Critical Sourcebook. Ed. Ellen Cushman, et al. Boston and New York:
Bedford/St.Martin’s, 2001. 19-31. Print.

Papen, Uta. Adult Literacy as Social Practice: More Than Skills. London: Routledge,
2009. Print.

Rivera, Klaudia M. and Ana Huerta-Macias. Adult Biliteracy: Sociocultural and
Programmatic Responses. London: Routledge, 2010. Print.

Street, Brian V., ed. Literacy and Development: Ethnographic Perspectives. London:
Routledge, 2001. Web. 18 November 2013.
--- Literacy in Theory and Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984. Web.
15 November 2013.

Wiley, Terrence G. Literacy and Language Diversity in the United States, 2nd ed.
Washington D.C.: Center for Applied Linguistics, 2005. Print.



No comments:

Post a Comment