Skip to main content

[]

Intended for healthcare professionals
Skip to main content
Restricted access
Research article
First published June 2003

Cultural Ways of Learning: Individual Traits or Repertoires of Practice

Abstract

This article addresses a challenge faced by those who study cultural variation in approaches to learning: how to characterize regularities of individuals’ approaches according to their cultural background. We argue against the common approach of assuming that regularities are static, and that general traits of individuals are attributable categorically to ethnic group membership. We suggest that a cultural-historical approach can be used to help move beyond this assumption by focusing researchers’ and practitioners’ attention on variations in individuals’ and groups’ histories of engagement in cultural practices because the variations reside not as traits of individuals or collections of individuals, but as proclivities of people with certain histories of engagement with specific cultural activities. Thus, individuals’ and groups’ experience in activities—not their traits—becomes the focus. Also, we note that cultural-historical work needs to devote more attention to researching regularities in the variations among cultural communities in order to bring these ideas to fruition.

Get full access to this article

View all access and purchase options for this article.

REFERENCES

Banks JA. Handbook of research on multicultural education 1995 New York Macmillan
Berlin D. The social construction of deviance: Effects of labeling on students with learning difficulties 2002 University of California, Los Angeles Unpublished doctoral dissertation.
Cole M. Cultural psychology: A once and future discipline 1996 Cambridge, MA Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
Cole M. Can cultural psychology help us think about diversity?. Mind, Culture, and Activity 1998;5 4 291-304
Cole M and Bruner JS. Cultural differences and inferences about psychological processes. American Psychologist 1971;26:867-876
Cole M and Engestrom Y. Salomon G. A cultural-historical approach to distributed cognition. Distributed cognitions: Psychological and educational considerations 1993 New York Cambridge University Press 1-46
Dunn R and Dunn K. Teaching elementary students through their individual learning styles 1992 Boston Allyn and Bacon
Dunn R, Gemake J, Jalali F, Zenhausern R, Quinn P, and Spiridakis J. Cross-cultural differences in learning styles of elementary-age students from four ethnic backgrounds. Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development 1990;18:68-93
Dunn R, Griggs SA, and Price GE. Learning styles of Mexican-American and Anglo-American elementary school students. Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development 1993;21:237-247
Engestrom Y. Chaiklin S and Lave J. Developmental studies of work as a test bench of activity theory: The case of primary care medical practice. Understanding practice: Perspective on activity and context 1993 Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 64-103
Foley D. Valencia R. Deficit thinking models based on culture: The anthropological protest. The evolution of deficit thinking: Educational thought and practice 1997 Washington, DC Falmer Press 113-131
Gay G. Banks JA. Curriculum theory and multicultural education. Handbook of research on multicultural education 1995 New York Macmillan 25-43
Gay G. Culturally responsive teaching 2000 New York Teachers College Press
Guild P. The culture/learning style connection. Educational Leadership 1994;51 8 16-21
Gutiérrez K. Studying cultural practices in urban learning communities. Human Development 2002;45 4 312-321
Gutiérrez K, Asato J, Santos M, and Gotanda N. Backlash pedagogy: Language and culture and the politics of reform. The Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies 2002;24 4 335-351
Gutiérrez K, Baquedano-Lopez P, and Alvarez H. de la Luz Reyes M and Halcón J. Literacy as hybridity: Moving beyond bilingualism in urban classrooms. The best for our children: Critical perspectives on literacy for Latino students 2001 New York Teachers College Press 122-141
Gutiérrez K, Baquedano-Lopez P, and Tejeda C. Rethinking diversity: Hybridity and hybrid language practices in the third space. Mind, Culture, & Activity 1999;6:286-303
Gutiérrez K, Crosland K, and Berlin D. Reconsidering coaching: Assisting teachers’ literacy practices in the zone of proximal development 2001 Paper presented at the meeting of the American Educational Research Association Seattle, WA
Hickson J, Land AJ, and Aikman G. Learning style differences in middle school pupils from four ethnic backgrounds. School Psychology International 1994;15:349-359
Hilliard AG III, &, and Vaughn-Scott M. Moore SG and Cooper CR. The quest for the “minority” child. The young child: Reviews of research 1982;3 Washington, DC National Association for the Education of Young Children 175-189
Howard A and Scott RA. Munroe RH, Munroe RL, and Whiting BB. The study of minority groups in complex societies. Handbook of cross-cultural human development 1981 New York Garland 113-152
Irvine J and York D. Banks JA. Learning styles and culturally diverse students. Handbook of research on multicultural education 1995 New York Macmillan 484-497
Kavale KA and Forness SR. Substance over style: Assessing the efficacy of modality testing and teaching. Exceptional Children 1987;56 3 228-239
Lave J. Teaching, as learning in practice. Mind, Culture, and Activity 1996;3:149-164
Lee C. Is October Brown Chinese? A cultural modeling activity system for underachieving students. American Educational Research Journal 2001;38 1 97-141
Lee CD. Signifying as a scaffold for literary interpretation 1993 Urbana, IL National Council of Teachers of English
Matthews DB. Learning styles research: Implications for increasing students in teacher education programs. Journal of Instructional Psychology 1991;18:228-236
McLoyd VC and Randolph SM. Smuts AB and Hagen JW. Secular trends in the study of Afro-American children: A review of Child Development, 1936–1980. History and research in child development 1985 78-92 Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Developmen, 50 (Serial No. 211).
McShane D and Berry JW. Irvine JH and Berry JW. Native North Americans: Indian and Inuit abilities. Human abilities in cultural context 1986 Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 385-426
Mejía Arauz R, Rogoff B, and Paradise R. Cultural variation in children’s observation of a demonstration 2003 Manuscript submitted for publication.
Moll LC. Lee C and Smagorinsky P. Inspired by Vygotsky: Ethnographic experiments in education. Vygotskian perspectives on literacy research: Constructing meaning through collaborative inquiry 2000 New York Cambridge University Press 256-268
Moll L, Saez R, and Dworin J. Exploring biliteracy: Two student case examples of writing as a social practice. Elementary School Journal 2001;101 4 435-449
Nieto S. The light in their eyes: Creating multicultural learning communities 1999 New York Teachers College Press
Ortiz FI. Weis L. Hispanic-American children’s experiences in classrooms. Class, race, and gender in American education 1988 Albany, NY SUNY Press 63-86
Price GE and Dunn R. LSI Manual 1997 Lawrence, KS Price Systems, Inc
Rogoff B. Amsel E and Renninger A. Evaluating development in the process of participation: Theory, methods, and practice building on each other. Change and development: Issues of theory, application, and method 1997 Hillsdale, NJ Erlbaum 265-285
Rogoff B. The cultural nature of human development 2003 New York Oxford University Press
Rogoff B and Angelillo C. Investigating the coordinated functioning of multifaceted cultural practices in human development. Human Development 2002;45:211-225
Rogoff B, Goodman Turkanis C, and Bartlett L. Learning together: Children and adults in a school community 2001 New York Oxford University Press
Rogoff B, Mistry J, Göncü A, and Mosier C. Guided participation in cultural activity by toddlers and caregivers. Monographs of the Society for Research and Child Development 1993;58 (7, Serial No. 236).
Rogoff B, Paradise R, Mejía Arauz R, Correa-Chávez M, and Angelillo C. Firsthand learning through intent participation. Annual Review of Psychology 2003;54:175-203
Rose M. Narrowing the mind and page: Remedial writers and cognitive reductionism. College Composition and Communication 1988;39 3 267-301
Tejeda C and Espinoza M. Reconceptualizing the role of dialogue in transformative learning 2002 Paper presented at meetings of the American Educational Research Association New Orleans, LA.
Tejeda C, Espinoza M, and Gutiérrez K. Trifonas P. Toward a decolonizing pedagogy: Social justice reconsidered. Pedagogy of difference: Rethinking education for social change 2003 New York Routledge 10-40
Tiedeman J. Measures of cognitive style. Educational Psychologist 1989;24 3 261-275

Cite article

Cite article

Cite article

OR

Download to reference manager

If you have citation software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice

Share options

Share

Share this article

Share with email
Email Article Link
Share on social media

Share access to this article

Sharing links are not relevant where the article is open access and not available if you do not have a subscription.

For more information view the Sage Journals article sharing page.

Information, rights and permissions

Information

Published In

Article first published: June 2003
Issue published: June 2003

Rights and permissions

© 2003.
Request permissions for this article.

Authors

Affiliations

Kris D. Gutiérrez
professor
University of California, Los Angeles, Graduate School of Education and Information Studies, Urban Schooling: Curriculum, Teaching, Leadership & Policy Studies, 1026 Moore Hall, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1521; [email protected]. Her research interests focus on literacy learning and culture in both formal and nonformal learning environments, and on the study of educational reform on English language learners
Barbara Rogoff
UCSC Foundation Professor of Psychology
University of California, Santa Cruz, 277 Social Sciences 2, Santa Cruz, CA 95064; [email protected]. Her research focuses on cultural supports for learning, especially learning through observation and varying participation structures

Metrics and citations

Metrics

Journals metrics

This article was published in Educational Researcher.

View All Journal Metrics

Article usage*

Total views and downloads: 9626

*Article usage tracking started in December 2016


Altmetric

See the impact this article is making through the number of times it’s been read, and the Altmetric Score.
Learn more about the Altmetric Scores



Articles citing this one

Receive email alerts when this article is cited

Web of Science: 0

Crossref: 1243

  1. Illustrating the need for centering student identity in universal school-based social and emotional learning
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  2. Comparison of Indonesian students’ experiences in Japan and Indonesia: understanding global governance and self-efficacy in work readiness
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  3. 60 years’ development of research on sociocultural theory: a bibliometric analysis
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  4. Mitigating Learner Disadvantages in Teaching and Learning
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  5. Redefining Diversity in Education: A New Index for Measuring Cultural Diversity in Schools by Examining a Decade of Change in Central Indiana Schools
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  6. The Quality of Interactions in the Home Science Environment and Associations With Children's Science Learning
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  7. Understanding Science Teacher Learning as Situated in Organizational Contexts: Introduction to the Special Issue
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  8. The Role of Asset-Based Pedagogy in Promoting Belonging and Ethnic-Racial Identity among Latine Students
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  9. Affirming children’s dignity in their affective flow in play‐based science inquiry
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  10. Evolution of teachers’ perspectives on family engagement: Building dual capacity for multilingual learners
    Go to citationCrossrefGoogle Scholar
  11. View More

Figures and tables

Figures & Media

Tables

View Options

Access options

If you have access to journal content via a personal subscription, university, library, employer or society, select from the options below:

AERA members can access this journal content using society membership credentials.

AERA members can access this journal content using society membership credentials.


Alternatively, view purchase options below:

Purchase 24 hour online access to view and download content.

Access journal content via a DeepDyve subscription or find out more about this option.

View options

PDF/EPUB

View PDF/EPUB