Preface; Part I. Introduction: Reading, Writing and the Mind; 1. Awakening: reading and consciousness; Part II. Theories of the Relation between Writing and Mind: 2. Inventing writing: the history of writing and the ontogeny of writing; 3. Dewey and the New Pragmatists: reading, writing and mind; 4. Vygotsky and the Vygotskians; 5. The cognitive science of metarepresentation; Part III. Reading and the Invention of Language about Language: 6. Phonemes and the alphabet; 7. The discovery of words and thinking about words; 8. Sentences and logic; 9. Prose and rational argument; 10. The testing of rationality and the rationality of testing; Part IV. The Implications and Uses of Metarepresentational Language: 11. The psychology and pedagogy of reading; 12. The psychology and pedagogy of rationality; Part V. Conclusions: 13. Reading, consciousness and rationality; References; Author index; Subject index.
Shows why reading and writing are essential to developing a consciousness of language that, in turn, lies at the core of rationality.
David R. Olson is University Professor Emeritus at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto. He is the author or editor of 20 books and more than 300 articles on cognition, language and literacy. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada and the National Academy of Education (US), and has been awarded honorary degrees by the University of Gothenburg, the University of Saskatchewan, and the University of Toronto.
'This is a highly original and compelling treatment of the effects
of literacy on human consciousness, written by the world's leading
expert on the cognitive consequences of literacy. The
interdisciplinary approach will be of interest to scholars of
cognitive psychology, developmental psychology, education,
philosophy, and linguistics.' Susan Gelman, University of
Michigan
'This substantial and original work makes a compelling argument in
favour of the significance of metarepresentation for reading. It
provides critical insights into the interconnections between
reading, writing, and reasoning, and makes a valuable contribution
to our understanding of mind. Olson's incisive argument should have
important educational consequences.' Jan Derry, UCL Institute of
Education
'In The Mind on Paper, Olson (emer., Univ. of Toronto) presents an
extensively researched text that draws on myriad disciplines,
including developmental psychology, education, philosophy, and the
history of reading, writing, and linguistics. The author thoroughly
examines the role that literacy has on human consciousness.' J.
Bailey, Choice
'This is a wonderful book … with fresh insights on every page. It
should be of interest to school and university educators, to
literacy scholars, to psychologists and to philosophers.' Ian
Winchester, Interchange
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