Towards an archaeology of pedagogy: learning, teaching and the generation of material culture traditions

Abstract In this article we seek to build on efforts to apply the insights of social learning theory to interpret patterns of continuity and change in the archaeological record. This literature suggests that stable and often highly arbitrary material culture traditions are likely to be founded on our biologically evolved capacity for imitation. However, it has recently been argued that the latter may be insufficient to explain the long-term maintenance of complex and difficult-to-master skills, such as those required to produce stone tools, pots, textiles and other cognitively opaque cultural forms. To ensure that these skills are accurately transferred to the next generation, adults must actively guide and control the learning activities of their children, a mode of transmission that can be labelled ‘pedagogy’. The importance of pedagogy has often been overlooked in the theoretical and empirical literature on craft learning, a fact that can probably be attributed to an unnecessarily narrow conception of teaching that equates it with explicit linguistic instruction. Using ethnographic data gathered from detailed case studies, we characterize pedagogy in the context of craft apprenticeships as involving the gradual scaffolding of skill in a novice through demonstration, intervention and collaboration. Although these processes cannot be directly observed in the archaeological record, they can sometimes be inferred through the detailed reconstruction of operational chains in past technologies. The evidence we present suggests that pedagogy has played an essential role in securing the faithful transmission of skills across generations, and should be regarded as the central mechanism through which long-term and stable material culture traditions are propagated and maintained.

[1]  D. Stout Skill and Cognition in Stone Tool Production , 2002, Current Anthropology.

[2]  P. Richerson,et al.  Not by genes alone: How culture transformed human evolution. , 2004 .

[3]  Kjel Knutsson,et al.  Skilled production and social reproduction : Aspects of Traditional Stone-Too technologies , 2006 .

[4]  K. Sterelny Genes, Memes and Human History , 2004 .

[5]  P. Crown,et al.  Learning to Make Pottery in the Prehispanic American Southwest , 2001, Journal of Anthropological Research.

[6]  P. Greenfield,et al.  History, Culture, Learning, and Development , 2000 .

[7]  Patrick V. Kirch,et al.  Hawaiki, Ancestral Polynesia: An Essay in Historical Anthropology , 2001 .

[8]  J. Pelegrin,et al.  Prehistoric Lithic Technology : Some Aspects of Research , 1990 .

[9]  K. MacDonald Cross-cultural Comparison of Learning in Human Hunting , 2007, Human nature.

[10]  Michael William Coy,et al.  Apprenticeship : from theory to method and back again , 1991 .

[11]  Dietrich Stout,et al.  The social and cultural context of stone knapping skill acquisition , 2005 .

[12]  Laureano Castro,et al.  The evolution of culture: from primate social learning to human culture. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[13]  D. Breternitz Society for American Archaeology , 1965, American Antiquity.

[14]  Brian Hayden,et al.  Interaction inferences in archaeology and learning frameworks of the maya , 1984 .

[15]  Shannon P McPherron,et al.  Stone knapping: the necessary conditions for a uniquely hominin behaviour , 2007 .

[16]  Etienne Wenger,et al.  Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation , 1991 .

[17]  Martin H. Levinson Not by Genes Alone: How Culture Transformed Human Evolution , 2006 .

[18]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Science, style and the study of community structure : an example from the Central Mississippi River Valley , 2000 .

[19]  B. Schneuwly Cultural learning is cultural. [A commentary on Tomasello, Krugner and Ratner's "Cultural learning" Peer commentary by B. Schneuwly] , 1993 .

[20]  K. Ruddle,et al.  Education for traditional food procurement in the Orinoco delta , 1977 .

[21]  D. Macdonald,et al.  Subsistence, Sex, and Cultural Transmission in Folsom Culture , 1998 .

[22]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Mapping our ancestors : phylogenetic approaches in anthropology and prehistory , 2006 .

[23]  T. Caro,et al.  Is There Teaching in Nonhuman Animals? , 1992, The Quarterly Review of Biology.

[24]  F Riede Maglemosian Memes: Technological Ontology, Craft Traditions and the Evolution of Northern European Barbed Points , 2008 .

[25]  S. Shennan,et al.  Processes of culture change in prehistory: a case study from the European Neolithic , 2000 .

[26]  Felix Riede,et al.  Chaîne Opératoire, Chaîne Evolutionaire? Putting technological sequences into an evolutionary perspective , 2006 .

[27]  M. Erpino Evolution teaching. , 1996, Science.

[28]  F. Berkes,et al.  Transmission of Indigenous Knowledge and Bush Skills Among the Western James Bay Cree Women of Subarctic Canada , 1997 .

[29]  Mark Collard,et al.  Seven. The Evolution of Material Culture Diversity among Iranian Tribal Populations , 2009 .

[30]  Stephen J. Lycett,et al.  On questions surrounding the Acheulean ‘tradition’ , 2008 .

[31]  Mark H. Johnson,et al.  Processes of change in brain and cognitive development , 2005, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[32]  M. Collard,et al.  Investigating cultural evolution through biological phylogenetic analyses of Turkmen textiles , 2002 .

[33]  Anders Högberg,et al.  Playing with Flint: Tracing a Child’s Imitation of Adult Work in a Lithic Assemblage , 2008 .

[34]  Kjel Knutsson,et al.  Skilled production and social reproduction , 2006 .

[35]  S. Mithen Ecological Interpretations of Palaeolithic Art , 1991, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[36]  Dan Sperber,et al.  The cognitive foundations of cultural stability and diversity , 2004, Trends in Cognitive Sciences.

[37]  A. Whiten,et al.  Imitation of hierarchical action structure by young children. , 2006, Developmental science.

[38]  L. Johansen,et al.  Two 'Epi-Ahrensburgian' sites in the northem Netherlands: Oudehaske (Friesland) and Gramsbergen (Overijssel) , 2000 .

[39]  A. Högberg Child and Adult at a Knapping Area. A technological Flake Analysis of the Manufacture of a Neolithic Square Sectioned Axe and a Child’s Flint knapping Activities on an Assemblage excavated as Part of the Öresund Fixed Link Project. , 1999 .

[40]  Andrew Whiten,et al.  The second inheritance system of chimpanzees and humans , 2005, Nature.

[41]  D. Stapert Youngsters knapping flint near the campfire : An alternative view of site k at Maastricht-Belvédère (the Netherlands) , 2007 .

[42]  P. Bodu Les Chasseurs Magdaleniens De Pincevent; Quelques Aspects De Leurs Comportements. , 1996 .

[43]  M. J. O’Brien,et al.  Mapping our Ancestors: Phylogenetic Methods in Anthropology and Prehistory , 2006 .

[44]  Jan Apel,et al.  Knowledge, Know-how and Raw Material - The Production of Late Neolithic Flint Daggers in Scandinavia , 2008 .

[45]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Cultural transmission, copying errors, and the generation of variation in material culture and the archaeological record , 2005 .

[46]  Mark Collard,et al.  On the relationship between interindividual cultural transmission and population-level cultural diversity: a case study of weaving in Iranian tribal populations , 2009 .

[47]  Stephen C. Want,et al.  How do children ape? Applying concepts from the study of non-human primates to the developmental study of 'imitation' in children , 2002 .

[48]  O. Soffer,et al.  Perceived landscapes and built environments. The cultural geography of Late Paleolithic Eurasia , 2003 .

[49]  G. Csibra,et al.  Social learning and social cognition: The case for pedagogy , 2006 .

[50]  S. Milne Palaeo-Eskimo Novice Flintknapping in the Eastern Canadian Arctic , 2005 .

[51]  Nyree Finlay,et al.  Introduction: Archaeological Approaches to Lithic Production Skill and Craft Learning , 2008 .

[52]  N. Pigeot,et al.  Technical and Social Actors. Flintknapping Specialists and Apprentices at Magdalenian Etiolles , 1990 .

[53]  Robert L. Bettinger,et al.  Point Typologies, Cultural Transmission, and the Spread of Bow-and-Arrow Technology in the Prehistoric Great Basin , 1999, American Antiquity.

[54]  M. Collard,et al.  Investigating the peopling of North America through cladistic analyses of Early Paleoindian projectile points , 2007 .

[55]  G. Clark,et al.  Art as information: Explaining Upper Palaeolithic art in western Europe , 1994 .

[56]  Michael J. O'Brien,et al.  Cladistics and archaeology , 2003 .

[57]  P. Pétrequin,et al.  La poterie en Nouvelle-Guinée : savoir-faire et transmission des techniques , 1999 .

[58]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Cultural Transmission Theory and the Archaeological Record: Providing Context to Understanding Variation and Temporal Changes in Material Culture , 2007 .

[59]  Stephen Shennan,et al.  Cultural learning in hominids: a behavioural ecological approach , 1999 .