I can't help but wonder though, where you would put someone who refused
to assimilate or accommodate, and simply said, "It wasn't poetry."

 

Carol

 

Carol DeVolder, Ph.D. 
Professor of Psychology 
Chair, Department of Psychology 
St. Ambrose University 
Davenport, Iowa  52803 

phone: 563-333-6482 
e-mail: [email protected] 

 

From: Michael Britt [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, January 29, 2009 12:04 PM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] Piaget and Poetry

 


Ok, now it's starting to come together for me.  Ken what you're saying
here fits in with another thought that came to me the other day.  Here
goes: if I think "poetry" consists of what I find on a birthday card:

 

I hope you enjoy your birthday,

All the pleasures it has in store,

And because I appreciate you,

I hope you have many more!

 

Then the benediction by Rev. Joseph Lowery ("...when yellow will be
mellow ... when the red man can get ahead, man; and when white will
embrace what is right. ..") - which by the way was received very
positively - and indeed your limerick, would easily be assimilated as
"poetry".  However, Ms. Alexander's poem was just too different for many
people to be able to assimilate.  So, one would need to accommodate
one's schema of "poetry" (assuming, as Gary pointed out in a previous
post, that a person saw this issue as an "an environmental challenge"
that needed resolving).  Agreed?

 

Michael

 

Michael Britt

[email protected]

www.thepsychfiles.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

On Jan 29, 2009, at 11:51 AM, Ken Steele wrote:






One example could be Jabberwocky...

'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;
All mimsy were the borogoves,
And the mome raths outgrabe.

The words are nonsense but it sounds meaningful because it fits our
schema of what a poem should sound like.

Ken

Michael Britt wrote:



Ok.  I'll buy that.  So, can you give an example of how assimilation
would occur in this context?

        Michael

        Michael Britt

        [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

        www.thepsychfiles.com <http://www.thepsychfiles.com>

        On Jan 28, 2009, at 8:02 PM, [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> wrote:

                 

                 

                 

                Any time you modify a schema to take in new information,
that is accomodation.

                In a message dated 1/28/2009 1:08:57 P.M. Eastern
Standard Time, [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> writes:

                 

                   So the first question is: Is adding into your
schema of "poetry" that "poetry is words that evoke images" an

                   example     of assimilation or accommodation?   I'm
thinking assimilation.

                 

                 


---------------------------------------------------------------
Kenneth M. Steele, Ph.D.                  [email protected]
Professor and Assistant Chairperson
Department of Psychology          http://www.psych.appstate.edu
Appalachian State University
Boone, NC 28608
USA
---------------------------------------------------------------


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