From Memory to Mediation: Teaching Vocabulary in the Age of Cognitive Abundance
Klassenzimmeransicht mit Trennwänden. AI image The Divider as Epistemology The vocabulary test is about to begin. A familiar tension settles in the room, a quiet tightening of attention that precedes evaluation. Before anything is written, the teacher moves between the rows, placing wooden dividers on each desk. The gesture is routine, almost administrative, yet it reorganizes the space entirely: students are now separated not only physically, but cognitively. No glance, no hesitation, no informal exchange is allowed to circulate. What is being staged here is more than an exam condition. It is a controlled reconstruction of isolation. For a brief moment, the classroom becomes a sealed cognitive environment in which external assistance is suspended. The underlying assumption is implicit but decisive: knowing a word means being able to retrieve it without mediation. Even this modest architectural intervention already carries a theory of knowledge within it. Knowledge as Internal ...