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   » » Wiki: Sylvia Scribner
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Sylvia Scribner (1923 – July 20, 1991) was an American and educational researcher who focused on the role of in and . Her parents were Gussie and Harry Cohen, and Sylvia Scribner also had a sister, Shirley.


Biographical outline
Born to a Jewish family, Jewish Women's Archives: "Psychology in the United States" by Rhoda K. Unger] retrieved March 26, 2017 Scribner began writing poetry at a young age, and on the strength of her poetry received a full scholarship to . In 1943, she graduated from Smith College as and Phi Beta Kappa. After graduation, she worked as the research director for United Electrical, Radio and Machine Workers of America, where she worked towards inclusion and lobbied for women and minorities.
(1997). 9780521467674, Cambridge University Press. .
Scribner later returned to school, receiving a masters in psychology from the City University of New York (CUNY) and a from the New School for Social Research in 1970. She held a series of positions prior to becoming a faculty member of the CUNY Graduate School in 1981, including: senior research associate at Rockefeller University (1970–1978); associate director of the National Institute of Education (1978–1979); and senior scientist at the Center for Applied Linguistics (1979–1981). Scribner held her position as a faculty member at CUNY until her death in 1991.


Publications
Scribner has published a great deal, including various articles and several books. Her seminal work is perhaps The Psychology of Literacy
(1981). 9780674721159, Harvard University Press.
with co-author Michael Cole, on linguistics and learning in the Vai of Liberia. She also contributed to a 1978 edition of Vygotsky's Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes, edited with Michael Cole, Vera John-Steiner, and Ellen Souberman.
(1978). 9780674576292, Harvard University Press.

After Scribner died, the book Mind and social practice: Selected writings of Sylvia Scribner (a collection of her unpublished essays) was published in 1997. The editors all were close with Scribner: , Rachel Joffe Falmagne, Mary Brown Parlee, & Laura M.W. Martin were all friends and colleagues; Aggie Scribner Kapelman is her daughter. They prefaced the book with both personal and professional biographical details.


Awards
As a freshman at Smith College in 1940, Scribner was a William Allen Neilson Scholar, and as a sophomore she received the Arthur Ellis Hamm Scholarship Prize for her excellent academic scholarship. Later, in 1982, Scribner and Michael Cole received the in 1982 for The Psychology of Literacy.

In recognition of Scribner's scholarship and contributions to the field, the American Educational Research Association annually awards the Scribner Award to outstanding scholars in the field of learning and instruction. Recipients include Marilyn Jager Adams, Richard C. Anderson, , and .


Personal life
Sylvia Scribner married David Scribner in 1953. They had two children together, Oliver and Aggie, and three children from David's previous marriage, Toni, Wendy, and Nancy.


Further reading
  • Unger, Rhoda K. "Psychology in the United States", Jewish Women: A Comprehensive Historical Encyclopedia. March 1, 2009. Jewish Women's Archive. Retrieved July 18, 2015.

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