Cognition Conation and Connotation
Cognition Conation and Connotation
Language Arts
Volume 11 Article 3
Issue 4 July 1971
7-1-1971
Recommended Citation
Crebo, A. C. (1971). Cognition, Conation, and Connotation. Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and
Language Arts, 11 (4). Retrieved from https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/reading_horizons/vol11/iss4/3
* Jean Piaget, Play, Dreams and Imitation in Childhood, Norton, 1951 (1945).
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practical education terms, this means that without allowance for
and even aid to the accommodating process (which implies the
personally evaluative, essentially private sphere of affectivity), sub-
sequent "assimilations" of knowledge can be like so many castles
constructed on sand. The next shift in the wind of attention will
disintegrate them; for the underlying foundation that only felt mean-
ing can provide will never have been realized. In reading, this under-
standing-in-depth and integration with already existent structures of
"prehension" goes, by and large, under the name of comprehension~
which term even sounds like what it means-to grasp and create a
meaningful whole out of garnered information or experience. Knowl-
edge which has not made the connection with the affective schemas
that results in accommodation and thus in equilibrium is not self-
realized knowledge-knowledge which can expand or raise the level
of conscious awareness. Thus it is meaningless for the person and
thereby rendered incapable of entering into subsequent mental develop-
ments. In other words, little "significant" learning has taken place-
a few or more than a few bits and scraps of information committed
to short-term memory, then reproduced on test paper, without there
ever having been experienced the meaning without which the knowl-
edge cannot become an integral part of the cognitive equipment
of the organism.
Back for a final look at the classroom where the children were
viewing the films of Eskimo life-presumably one of the main points to
be gotten across is that man is identifiably Man with ultimately the
same problems to face however differently he goes about solving them
within the framework of his particular culture and within the scope
of his particular level of development. Children denied the opportunity
of expressing and airing in open discussion their initial reactions of
repugnance and dismay at disturbing revelations about the Eskimo's
cultural values and practices will probably not make this primary
identification of (and more importantly with) the Netsilik as a fellow
human being, and thereby a valuable opportunity for broadening
the child's world-view as well as deepening his understanding of
himself in relation to his own cultural pattern is lost.
Fortunately not irretrievably so for the twenty Newton youngsters,
for one of the teachers involved in presenting these studies insisted
on being permitted to follow her teacher's "instinct" and encouraged
the children to express openly their honest reactions to the impact
of such seemingly radically different cultural values. The discussion
that ensued not only considerably eased the tensions but allowed for
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