Gordon Pask’s Conversation Theory

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What It Is

A cybernetic framework for understanding how knowledge emerges through dialogue—whether between two people or between a person and a machine. Pask models both parties as learning systems whose internal states evolve during interaction https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversation_theory

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Core Ideas

  • Shared domains: Learning happens about a specific topic (“conversational domain”). For A and B to truly learn together, they must be able to converse in ways that let them understand and agree—explicitly making knowledge visible Wikipedia.
  • Iterative knowledge building: Dialogue isn’t just exchanging information. Participants negotiate meanings, adjust their mental states, and coordinate roles, resulting in deeper internal and joint understanding instructionaldesign.org+4Wikipedia+4thehope.tripod.com+4.

Language layers

  1. Natural language — casual, everyday talk.
  2. Object language — focused on the topic of learning, utilizing commands/questions.
  3. Metalanguage — meta-discussion about the conversation itself and its structure Wikipedia+1Wikipedia+1.

Learning Styles

Pask identified two cognitive strategies in learners:

  1. Serialists: tackle material step-by-step.
  2. Holists: grasp the bigger picture first.

Optimal learning emerges when both are used—a versatile strategy

Why It Matters

  1. Education & HCI: Informed early intelligent tutoring and adaptive learning systems by focusing on conversational interaction rather than one-way delivery .
  2. Shared awareness: Pask emphasizes that cognition isn’t just inside heads—it's a joint phenomenon arising during interaction Wikipedia+2Wikipedia+2Wikipedia+2.
  3. Scientific rigour: He used computer models to ground conversations in measurable, reproducible processes Wikipedia+2Wikipedia+2Wikipedia+2.

Summary

Conversation Theory posits that learning is co-constructed through structured, layered dialogue. Participants actively align ideas, adjust mental maps, and deepen understanding together. The theory influenced educational designs and human–computer interaction long before today's AI tutors.