Resumen:
Learning scientists have been considering the validity and relevance of arguments
coming from philosophy and cognitive science for the embodied, enactive, embedded, and
extended nature of individual learning, reasoning, and practice in sociocultural ecologies.
Specifically, some design-based researchers of STEM cognition and instruction have been
evaluating activities for grounding subject content knowledge in interactive sensorimotor
problem solving. In so doing, we submit, the field stands greatly to avail of theoretical models
and pedagogical methodologies from disciplines oriented explicitly on understanding, fostering,
and remediating motor action. This conceptual paper considers potential values of ecological
dynamics, a perspective originating in kinesiology, as an explanatory resource for tackling
enduring Learning Sciences research problems. We support our position via an ecologicaldynamics
reexamination of the function of metaphor in the instruction of sports skills, somatic
awareness, and mathematics. We propose a view of metaphors as productive constraints
reconfiguring the dynamic system of learner, teacher, and environment