Contents: M. Cathrene Connery: Building Bridges: The Contribution
of Dr. Vera John-Steiner’s Work – Robert Lake/M. Cathrene Connery:
Constructing a Community of Thought: Access through Epistolary
Understanding – Peter Smagorinsky: The Bold and Courageous Path of
Vera John-Steiner – Edward De Santis: Living Memory – Constance R.
Sutton: My Life-Long Dialogue with Vera John-Steiner – Suki John:
Veronka, My Czardas Dancing, Creative Thinking Mother – Reuben
Hersh: My Favorite Collaborator – Anne Wiltshire: From Your House
to My House – Bernard Spolsky: Above and Beyond Box Consciousness –
Michael Cole: Memories of a Long Conversation – Csaba Pléh/Ottilia
Boross: Networks in Life and in Science – Susan Ervin-Tripp: The
Remarkable Power of Bisociation – Laura E. Berk: Young Children’s
Sociodramatic Play: Wellspring of Collaboration and Learning –
Artin Göncü: Discovering Self in Play – Steven G. McCafferty: Vera
Was a Vygotskian before She Knew Who Vygotsky Was – Maryhelen
Snyder: Vera: Tribute and Tributary – Linda Finlay: Revisiting an
Interactive Approach to Advancing Literacy – Nan Elsasser: Working
Classroom: An Intergenerational Arts Community – Henry Shonerd:
Resonance – David Kellogg: Water and Wine: Painting as the
Emergence of Word Meanings from Images – Teresa Meehan: Applying a
Functional Systems Approach to the Study of Language Development –
R. Keith Sawyer: Vera John-Steiner’s Influence on Creativity
Research – David Henry Feldman: Who Knew? Being Part of a Thought
Community on Creativity: An Essay in Honor of Vera John-Steiner –
Patricia A. St. John: Dignified Interdependence – Kimberly
Cotter-Lemus: Cognitive Pluralism and Creative Collaboration –
Shirley Brice Heath: Reverberations – Sabra Sowell-Lovejoy: The
Influence of Vera John-Steiner’s Work on Sabra Sowell-Lovejoy:
Artist and Educator – Robert Lake: Bridges are Made for Movement –
Seana Moran: Tapestry: Interwoven Minds, Emerging Meanings – Nancy
J. Uscher: Vera John-Steiner on Creativity and Collaboration: A
Scholar Ahead of Her Time – Eleni Bastéa: And Perhaps Our Research
Leads Us Back to a World We Lost – Robin Oppenheimer: Creative
Collaboration as Revolutionary and Transformative – Anna Stetsenko:
Creativity in All of Us: A Dialogue with Vera John-Steiner – Andy
Blunden: Collaboration Is at the Heart of the Human Condition –
Patricia A. Richard-Amato: My Awakening – Le Ann Putney/Joan Wink:
From Vygotsky to Vera to All of Us: The Mentoring Magnifies –
Ronald Gallimore: A Researcher’s Grail: A Search for an Alternative
to Conventional
Teacher–Student Discourse – Laura Rychly: Dr. Vera John-Steiner as
a Key: Unlocking a Theory of Receptive Discourse – Robert Danberg:
The Constellation, Maker – Courtney Angermeier: You Will Meet Vera
– Christopher C. Shank: Vera John-Steiner: Mentor and Collaborator
– Susan K. Methany: Creativity and Collaboration: A Student’s
Salvation? – Sara Otto-Diniz: Creative Collaboration in the Art
Museum – Rod Parker-Rees: Collaborative Recreation – Judah Ronch:
Coming into Being: Creative Collaboration as a Life-Long Gift –
Carolyn Panofsky: The Schools Have Failed the Poor – Annalisa
Aguilar: My Noble Quest – Kathryn (Kate) J. Miller: Grateful
Recollections from Your Zone of Proximal Development – Holbrook
Mahn: Vera and the Gift of Confidence – Mervi Hasu: Vera: My
Inspiration for Discovering the ‘Invisibilities’ in the
Activity-Theoretical Studies of Innovation – Linney Wix: Finding
Myself in Vera and Finding Vera in Me – Sara Abercrombie: Creative
Transformation
Robert Lake, PhD, is Associate Professor in the Department of
Curriculum, Foundations, and Reading at Georgia Southern University
where he teaches courses in multicultural education from local and
global perspectives. His expertise in music and English as a Second
Language informs his research into creativity, critical educational
perspectives, and the imaginative curriculum. A frequent presenter
at international conferences, he is the author of several books
including Vygotsky on Education (Peter Lang, 2011).
M. Cathrene Connery, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Education at
Ithaca College. A bilingual educator, researcher, and advocate, she
has drawn on her visual arts education as a painter to inform her
research and professional activities in language, literacy, and
sociocultural studies. She has utilized Vygotskian theory to
articulate ethnographic accounts in Profiles in Emergent
Biliteracy: Children Making Meaning in a Chicano Community (Peter
Lang, 2011) and as an editor and contributor to Vygotsky and
Creativity: A Cultural-Historical Approach to Play, Meaning-Making,
and the Arts (Peter Lang, 2010).
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