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Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision: Moving Culture From the
Macro Into the Micro
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DOI: 10.1177/1745691617704397
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Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological theory of human devel-
opment is one of the most widely known theoretical
frameworks across a variety of disciplines and fields of
practice in the social sciences. For example, in the field
of early childhood education, Bronfenbrenner’s theory
has been in recurrent use for well over 20 years
(Härkönen, 2007). The popularity of the model began
in the 1980s, in the next decade after its first major
formulation (Bronfenbrenner, 1977).
Even though the bioecological theory has made a lot
of important contributions and has explained with great
complexity developmental transformations as part of
interdependent systems, it seems that the majority of
research within the framework resulted in having “con-
ceptual confusion and inadequate testing of the theory”
(Tudge, Mokrova, Hatfield, & Karnik, 2009, p. 198).
Tudge et al. (2009) examined 25 articles published from
2001 to 2008 all being based on Bronfenbrenner’s the-
ory; however, only 4 of these used the latest transfor-
mation of the theory appropriately in their research
within the author’s observations. Among the conceptual
confusion, the notion of culture stands out as particu-
larly problematic.
The bioecological theory’s stance on culture can be
challenged from major theoretical views, such as
Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, Barbara Rogoff’s trans-
formation of participation perspective, and Thomas
Weisner’s ecocultural theory. They all propose in some
way, as Markus and Kitayama (2009), that “culture is
not separate from the individual; it is a product of
human activity” (p. 423). This means that culture is not
a separate system operating from a macro level, but it
is within everyday action (activities, routines, practices)
and part of communities of practice through a language
mediated meaning-making system. Culture also lies in
704397PPSXXX10.1177/1745691617704397Vélez-Agosto et al.Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision
research-article2017
Corresponding Author:
Nicole M. Vélez-Agosto, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Recinto de Rio
Piedras–Psychology, San Juan 00931-3300, Puerto Rico
E-mail: nicole.velez3@upr.edu
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory
Revision: Moving Culture From the
Macro Into the Micro
Nicole M. Vélez-Agosto1, José G. Soto-Crespo2, Mónica
Vizcarrondo-Oppenheimer2, Stephanie Vega-Molina2, and
Cynthia García Coll2
1University of Puerto Rico and 2Albizu University
Abstract
Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological theory of human development is one of the most widely known theoretical frameworks
in human development. In spite of its popularity, the notion of culture within the macrosystem, as a separate entity
of everyday practices and therefore microsystems, is problematic. Using the theoretical and empirical work of Rogoff
and Weisner, and influenced as they are by Vygotsky’s sociocultural perspective, we reconceptualize Bronfenbrenner’s
model by placing culture as an intricate part of proximal development processes. In our model, culture has the role
of defining and organizing microsystems and therefore becomes part of the central processes of human development.
Culture is an ever changing system composed of the daily practices of social communities (families, schools,
neighborhoods, etc.) and the interpretation of those practices through language and communication. It also comprises
tools and signs that are part of the historical legacy of those communities, and thus diversity is an integral part of the
child’s microsystems, leading to culturally defined acceptable developmental processes and outcomes.
Keywords
cultural microsystems, human development, Bronfenbrenner’s theory
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision 901
our cognitive processes, such as intelligence (Sternberg,
2004) and memory. Therefore, it is necessary to con-
sider culture in the study of developmental processes
(Sternberg, 2014). However, even in its many transfor-
mations, in Bronfenbrenner’s model, culture is barely
formally introduced, and thus disguised inside the
major processes that occur just “out there” in the distal
environment.
The bioecological theory “raises questions about
treating individual and cultural processes as separate
entities” implicitly (Rogoff, 2003, p. 44), where “indi-
vidual and ‘larger’ contexts are conceived as existing
separately, related in a hierarchical fashion as the larger
contexts affect the smaller ones, which in turn affect
the developing person” (p. 46). This is why in this
article we unite Rogoff, Weisner, and Vygotsky’s socio-
cultural perspective to reconceptualize the role of cul-
ture as an intricate part of proximal developmental
processes. Following their critique and conceptualiza-
tion of culture, we propose a revision to the model
where culture has the role of operationalizing micro-
systems and therefore becomes part of the central pro-
cesses of human development. Since various cultural
legacies become part of everyday life, the diversity of
human experience is emphasized in this new model.
To develop our arguments, first we give a historical
overview of the role of culture in Bronfenbrenner’s
bioecological theory. We then present theoretical argu-
ments from the Rogoff, Weisner, and Vygotsky perspec-
tives and exemplify how they contribute to our major
theoretical revision on the role of culture in microsys-
tems. Finally, we present our revision to the model and
empirical cross-cultural data that support our important
paradigm shift of this theory.
Historical Overview of the Role
of Culture in Bronfenbrenner’s
Bioecological Paradigm
The development of Urie Bronfenbrenner’s theory had
two major periods. The first period was the 1970s with
the publication of The Ecology of Human Development,
and the second period was the 1990s. The first publica-
tion was in 1958, when Bronfenbrenner was concerned
with the state of research in developmental psychology.
He criticized the emphasis given to experimental rigor
instead of theory development. He stated that “much
of contemporary developmental psychology is the sci-
ence of strange behavior of children in strange situations
with strange adults for the briefest possible periods of
time” (Bronfenbrenner, 1977, p. 513). As an attempt to
remedy this, Bronfenbrenner developed ecological
theory in the 1970s, with an early influence of Kurt
Lewin’s approach to group dynamics and some of
Brim’s (1975) terminology.
Bronfenbrenner defined ecological theory as the
study of human development in context or enduring
environments (Bronfenbrenner, 1974). The child’s ecol-
ogy was, then, the enduring environments in which the
child lived, consisting of two concentric layers, the
upper and the supportive and surrounding layers (see
Fig. 1). The upper layer or the immediate settings
(home, school, street, playground, etc.) had three
dimensions: a physical one, the people and the roles
they played in the child’s life, as well as the activities
in which these people and the child are engaged. It
also included the social meanings of these activities.
The supportive layer was an adjacent one to the
immediate encompassing system that determined what
can or cannot occur in the immediate context
(Bronfenbrenner, 1974). It included the physical and
geographical settings as well as institutional contexts
(social systems). It is in this outside layer also, from
where there is the possibility of second order effects
interfering with the immediate context. The second
order effect was defined as the effect of a third C in A
and B (Bronfenbrenner, 1974). These early definitions
of ecological theory do not define culture, but culture
is implied in the form of social systems that are part of
the supportive layer. As Bronfenbrenner stated,
The supporting and surrounding layer, in which
the immediate setting is embedded, limits and
shapes what can and does occur within the
immediate setting: (1) geographic and physical,
for example, a housing project in which people
Fig. 1. Ecological model. This figure illustrates the ecological model
in 1974.
902 Vélez-Agosto et al.
live; (2) institutional—the social systems which
affect what can occur in the immediate setting.
(Bronfenbrenner, 1974, p. 2)
Bronfenbrenner’s further development of the theory
in 1977 expanded the layer model into a more complex
series of systems interdependent on each other (see
Fig. 2). The Ecology of Human Development was defined
then as
the scientific study of the progressive, mutual
accommodation, throughout the life span, between
a growing human organism and the changing
immediate environments in which it lives, as this
process is affected by relations obtaining within
and between these immediate settings, as well as
the larger social contexts, both formal and
informal, in which the settings are embedded.
(Bronfenbrenner, 1977, p. 514)
The ecological environment became a nested arrange-
ment of structures, each contained within the next. The
structures now were referred to as the microsystem, the
mesosystem, the exosystem, and the macrosystem. A
description of each system is given in Bronfenbrenner
(1977).
In this reiteration of the ecological theory of human
development, culture is not defined on its own either,
but it is said to contain the macrosystems, as well as to
be an ideological structure of the mesosystem
(Bronfenbrenner, 1977). Certain concepts associated
with culture are also said to be part of various macro-
systems, such as laws, rules, information, and ideology.
Another concept introduced is the blueprint, which is
mentioned as part of the macrosystem:
A macrosystem differs in a fundamental way from
the preceding forms in that it refers not to the
specific contexts affecting the life of a particular
person but to general prototypes, existing in the
culture or subculture that set the pattern for the
structures and activities occurring at the concrete
level. Thus, within a given society, one school
classroom looks and functions much like another.
The same holds true for other settings and
institutions, both informal and formal. It is as if
all were constructed from the same blueprints.
These “blueprints” are the macrosystems. Some
Fig. 2. The ecological theory of human development. This figure illustrates the second
revision to ecological theory (Bronfenbrenner, 1977).
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision 903
actually exist in explicit form as recorded laws,
regulations, and rules. (Bronfenbrenner, 1977,
p. 515)
The concept of blueprint is not further explained, but
could be assumed to be associated with how culture
gets reproduced from one setting to another. In its
exposition, culture for Bronfenbrenner is homogenizing
rather than diversifying the human experience.
The 1990s brought another set of important revisions
in Bronfenbrenner’s theory, named the general ecologi-
cal model or bioecological paradigm (Bronfenbrenner
& Ceci, 1994).
The developments were summarized in two proposi-
tions. He also introduced the process-person-context
notion. See the two propositions in Bronfenbrenner and
Ceci (1994).
Along with highlighting proximal processes, revi-
sions were made to some of the systems and a new one
was added. The one added was the chronosystem that
alludes to changes or consistencies over time of the
characteristics of the person and the environment
(Bronfenbrenner, 1999). In regard to investigating the
impact of time as a proxy for historical period on the
proximal processes, studies would have to be longitu-
dinal (Tudge et al., 2009).
Another important revision made was in the descrip-
tion of the microsystem. It was said that it comprised
patterns of activities in the immediate setting, but now
some of the activities were described as involving inter-
actions with symbolic features, that is, interactions with
persons, objects, and symbols (Bronfenbrenner, 1995b).
He also states that “for reciprocal interaction to occur,
the objects and symbols in the immediate environ-
ment must be of a kind that invites attention, explora-
tion, manipulation, elaboration, and imagination”
(Bronfenbrenner, 1999, p. 6).
Although there is further development of the role of
social and interactional features of the microsystems,
as well as objects and symbols, there is no tie to the
notion of culture in these developments or with these
concepts. Culture does not appear in everyday practices
or activities, since culture is somewhat theoretically
divorced from its products (objects and symbols). From
its inceptions and throughout its revisions, Bronfen-
brenner’s model lacks clarity of precision around the
construct of culture. Since the theory’s development, a
proper in-depth definition of culture and an acknowl-
edgment of its important role in human development
have been lacking. Culture has been situated in the
macrosystem and said to play a role because of the
interdependence of the systems. But how these transac-
tions operate and how culture is operationalized and
measured remain invisible in these models. No
conceptual definition of culture has been elaborated.
Without a proper conceptual definition, research and
interpretation in human development and culture are
negatively affected.
In the following sections we introduce Vygotskian
and neo-Vygotskian approaches to the role of culture
in development as a way to challenge Bronfenbrenner’s
approach, conceptually as well as methodologically.
Our conceptual framework follows Mistry et al.’s (2016)
conceptualization of culture as “generalizable ideolo-
gies and practices shared by groups, as well as, the
meaning-making processes through which individuals
interpret their environmental contexts by drawing on
the shared ideologies available to them as members of
groups” (p. 4). Culture is both the process and the
content of daily activity and is thus inseparable from
all contexts where developmental processes and out-
comes take place, especially in the microsystems.
Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory
Culture is a major concept in Vygotsky’s sociocultural
theory, even though it was not well developed by
Vygotsky and his followers (Wertsch & Tulviste, 1992).
Sociocultural theory is based on how culture mediates
human experience and transforms human activity. One
of its fundamental premises is that the external use of
culturally defined tools and signs is later internalized
in higher psychological functions. From this framework,
culture is not a separate entity operating from a higher
outside macro system, but culture is the system in
which every human daily activity is realized and even-
tually internalized.
Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory originated following
the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution in Russia. Alongside
Luria and Leontiev, Vygotsky worked toward a psy-
chology that would harmonize with Marxism. Con-
cepts such as tools, labor, and culture and history were
drawn from within Marxist influence and reconceptu-
alized to explain learning, development, and higher
psychological functions. From Vygotsky’s perspective,
cultural forms of behavior arise during infancy: in
particular in the use of tools and the development of
human speech: “This alone places infancy at the center
of the prehistory of cultural development” (Vygotsky,
1930–1934/1978, p. 34). The implications are that
development is, from the beginning, a culturally medi-
ated process because the use of tools and human
speech are culturally defined and acquired behaviors.
The acquisition of cultural forms of behavior implies
also that interpsychological functions between mem-
bers of a cultural group become intrapsychological.
This is expressed by the “general law of cultural
development”:
904 Vélez-Agosto et al.
Every function in the child’s cultural development
appears twice: first, on the social level, and later,
on the individual level; first, between people
(interpsychological), and then inside the child
(intrapsychological). This applies equally to
voluntary attention, to logical memory, and to the
formation of concepts. All the higher functions
originate as actual relations between human
individuals. (Vygotsky, 1930–1934/1978, p. 48)
Therefore, Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory places
culture in everyday activity because every form of
human activity is a cultural form of behavior: developed
and enacted in a defined cultural context and later
internalized by the individual. Vygotsky’s account of
culture suggests “human mental functioning, even when
carried out by an individual acting in isolation, is inher-
ently social, or socio cultural, in that it incorporates
socially evolved and socially organized cultural tools”
(Wertsch & Tulviste, 1992, p. 551). It is also a notion
closely related to semiotic mediation, understanding
language as a system of signs inherent to developmen-
tal processes and outcomes (Wertsch & Tulviste, 1992).
Although Bronfenbrenner was influenced earlier by
Vygotsky with the concept of reciprocal activity occur-
ring in microsystems, as well as proximal processes
(Wong, 2001), he did not consider Vygotsky’s more
abstract formulations (Bronfenbrenner, 1995a).
Vygotsky’s perspective contrasts with Bronfenbrenner’s
notion of culture as part of a remote macrosystem,
whose involvement in human activity and settings is by
means of interdependence between concentric circles.
The concept of interdependence comes from the dis-
cipline of dynamics in physics and was used by Kurt
Lewin to explain the behavior of social forces in a field
(Lewin, 1939). Interdependence implies “dynamic prop-
erties,” “types of reactions,” and “types of influences”
(Lewin, 1939). In Bronfenbrenner’s theory, culture is an
external influence because it belongs in the macrosys-
tem. In other words, culture is a separate entity from
the immediate settings.
The nature of interaction is seen in the patterns of
the activities performed, which are said to be influ-
enced by it. Therein lies the fundamental conceptual
difference between Bronfenbrenner and Vygotsky.
Bronfenbrenner’s use of the concept of interdepen-
dence simplifies the role of culture in development by
situating culture as an external influence, whereas
Vygotsky’s cultural mediation places it at the center of
the microsystem because culture provides the means,
activities, and meanings of every human activity within
a particular social origin.
It is important to distinguish between Lewin’s influ-
ence on Bronfenbrenner and his influence on Vygotksy.
As Wong (2001) observes:
Lewin was highly valued by Vygotsky. . . . In “Tool
and Symbol in Children’s Development,” Vygotsky
(1930) adhered to the Lewinian distinction between
phenotypic (description of external manifestation)
and genotypic (explanation of origin or essence)
viewpoints and declared his inclination to
determine causal-dynamic relations in psychological
analyses. But the Lewinian concept of “ life space”
or “ total situation” did not fertilize the soil of the
cultural-historical approach. (p. 367)
Lewin’s concepts adhere more to a geographical and
physical analogy, while Vygotsky’s cultural mediation
is a dialectic internalization of what once were external
cultural signs and tools. The dialectic internalization
implies that higher psychological functions are neither
external or internal because the dialectics require a
radical transformation that blurs any line across them.
In other words, the external becomes an extension of
internal psychological functions.
Aside from fundamental limitations in the notion of
culture in Bronfenbrenner’s theory, methodological
questions have arisen too. If culture enters develop-
mental research as an external factor from another sys-
tem, its analysis is reduced to describing the interaction
with other systems. But as we have been arguing from
Vygotsky’s perspective, culture is part of the articulation
of the microsystems in research process, because devel-
opmental changes imply “mastery of devices and means
of cultural behavior and thinking” (Luria, 1930, cited
by Wertsch & Tulviste, 1992). Through daily activities
and practices, culture becomes the unit of analysis.
Vygotsky’s perspective has influenced a lot of theo-
rists, and the sociocultural perspective has grown in
the United States, Latin America, Europe, and elsewhere
(Rodríguez Arocho, 1996).
Contributions from this perspective contrast with
Bronfenbrenner’s theory and situate the importance of
considering culture and context as inseparable (Mistry
et al., 2016).
Thomas Weisner: Ecocultural Theory
In the topic of culture and developmental research,
Thomas Weisner has contributed with conceptual and
empirical work from the perspective of the ecocultural
theory. From this theoretical perspective, the cultural
community provides children with developmental path-
ways inside an ecocultural context (Weisner, 2002).
Developmental pathways are internalized (or crystal-
lized) in everyday routines (bedtime, video games,
homework, cooking dinner, etc.). In this sense, culture
is the routines we engage in. According to Weisner,
García Coll, and Chatman-Nelson (2010, p. 84), “devel-
opmental pathways refers to the different kinds of
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision 905
activities, organized by families and local communities,
in which the child could or will engage during develop-
ment.” Although Bronfenbrenner’s perspective takes
into consideration the importance of routines and activ-
ities on the microsystem, there is no clear reference to
these actions as culturally defined or mediated, and,
similar to Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, the ecocul-
tural perspective understands culture as not separated
from the person and its interactions with the microsys-
tem, but developing as habits in a cultural community.
In this sense, cultural pathways consists of activities we
“step into” and move through life (Weisner, 2002).
According to Weisner, there are multiple behavioral
and mental processes involved in the developmental
attainment of culture (Weisner, 2015). Some of them
can be in conflict with cultural values and producing
intrapsychic and cultural conflict (Weisner, 2009). From
this perspective, the mentality of an individual’s culture
includes shared and idiosyncratic beliefs, practices, and
experiences that can be at conflict and could lead to
contradictory actions (Tonyan, Mamikonian-Zarpas, &
Chien, 2013). This phenomenon cannot be located in
any of the systems of Bronfenbrenner’s theory, since it
is the individual child or parent internalization or not
of cultural scripts. The individual becomes an actor in
its own development and not a total passive recipient
of culture.
Weisner’s theory recognizes the importance of the
ecological and cultural environment where the process
of development is taking place, headlining the relation-
ship between individual processes and sociocontextual
conditions that have an effect on the processes and
outcomes (McWayne, Limlingan, Melzi, & Schick, 2016).
Because these processes are contextual, one has to
determine where the person is developing, and what
are the resources, practices, beliefs, goals, institutions,
and so on in that cultural community. In a sense, what
we are trying to know is the “developmental niche” the
person is experiencing (Super & Harkness, 2002). This
concept makes sense with our model of cultural micro-
systems because we want to identify the practices, nar-
ratives, and institutions, among others, in a cultural
community that contribute to developmental processes
and outcomes.
Barbara Rogoff: Transformation of
Participation Perspective
Barbara Rogoff describes development as transforma-
tion of participation in sociocultural activities (Rogoff,
2003). Her conceptualization of cultural processes in
human development originates from Vygotsky’s socio-
cultural theory. Rogoff et al. (2007) places culture
within “community routines” that provide guidelines
“of engagement to cultural participation to build on in
daily activities” (p. 2). Cultural processes are not part
of a hierarchical system that interacts indirectly with
the individual; rather, culture permeates all aspects of
life (routines, habits, language) and therefore develop-
mental outcomes and processes.
Culture mediates development and learning since
the child begins the process of socialization (Correa-
Chávez & Rogoff, 2005). Learning processes are related
to cultural practices that dictate the type of engagement
the child will partake in the community. Children are
assigned to specific settings (day care, soccer practice)
by their caregivers or other agents of socialization.
“These settings have important consequences on the
development of habits of interpersonal behavior, con-
sequences that may not be recognized by the socializers
who make the assignments” (Whiting, 1980, p. 111).
Cultures differ in how they make these assignments and
how these settings are organized in profound ways.
The intent community participation approach
emphasizes the inclusion and engagement of children
in productive community activities (Rogoff, Correa-
Chávez, & Silva, 2009); this way children learn from
listening and actively observing adults engaged in pro-
duction activities (Rogoff et al., 2007). Also, this tradi-
tion attempts to carry out objectives by shared
communicative efforts between children and adults
(Rogoff et al., 2007). In contrast, the assembly line
approach separates children from adult community
activities and situates them in particular settings
designed exclusively for them, such as schools and day
care settings, which in turn structure communication
differently (Correa-Chávez & Rogoff, 2005). In fact, fol-
lowing this type of instruction, communication is mainly
dyadic since information is transmitted from experts to
children without shared productive efforts and com-
munication and even learning mostly relies on words.
This exemplifies the importance of culturally defined
institutions, traditions, and practices in establishing the
settings and the everyday practices in which members
of a community will participate, the microsystems in
Bronfenbrenner’s model.
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Model
Revision: Moving Culture From the
Macro Into the Micro
As we have argued from the theoretical perspectives of
Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, Thomas Weisner’s eco-
cultural theory, and Rogoff’s transformation of partici-
pation perspective, culture plays a central role in
everyday actions (settings, activities, routines, path-
ways, etc.) and provides the immediate context for
human development. Culture is an ever changing
906 Vélez-Agosto et al.
system composed of the practices of social communities
and the interpretation of those practices through lan-
guage. Language is not only a medium for communica-
tion; through language, practices are defined in content
and form facilitating action that is not completely lim-
ited by those definitions because of context. Through
language and practices, culture provides the tools and
signs that are part of the historical legacy of those com-
munities. These are integral parts of the child’s
microsystems.
In our revision to the bioecological model, our main
critique comes from an ontological dimension and from
a practical dimension. Human development takes place
within a cultural system. Culture constitutes the context
and reality of the developing person and that makes
culture a paradigm. From a practical dimension, indi-
viduals participate in cultural practices shaped by con-
text specificity and interact with communities and social
institutions that are both proximal and distal. Communi-
ties and social institutions are also interpretative sys-
tems that have the power to change and be changed
in those interactions. Culture is embedded in all institu-
tions that have the power to homogenize the daily
routines within that context through political policies,
laws, and regulations. Individuals interact in different
contexts and internalize certain cultural values and
practices, making each experience unique from a par-
ticular time in life development. Thus, the individual
adds diversity to the setting it interacts in.
A child’s cultural system is within an ever historical
transforming sphere (chronos), which moves and con-
tains the other systems in the bioecological model, but
does not relate to them as an outside layer. In our
model, we propose cultural microsystems, which include
family, peers, school, neighborhoods, day care centers,
and so on, shaped and structured by the social relation-
ships and activities that operate within a certain cultural
definitions. In addition, cultural microsystems not only
organize the relationships between what Bronfenbrenner
considered mesosystems, but the larger institutions out-
side the immediate settings or Bronfenbrenner’s exo-
system. Therefore, there is no need to differentiate
mesosystems and macrosystems from cultural micro-
systems or the exosystem, because cultural practices
already contain those relationships. These systems flow
from one another and interact with one another, not
bounded and distinctly, but fluidly.
Within the child’s cultural systems, socialization is
done through community routines that provide guide-
lines “of engagement in daily activities” (Rogoff et al.,
2007) or as Weisner (2002) conceptualizes it, in cultural
pathways. Similar to what Cole (1996) proposed, culture
is situated in the middle. Socialization is done in every-
day activities within human relationships that culturally
define age appropriate daily activities, routines, and
pathways. Other communities, settings, and social insti-
tutions, which are located in layers outside of the
microsystem in Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological para-
digm, are also constantly being transformed by the
cultural system in a reciprocal way. They are not
bounded separate entities, but flow into one another.
This means that Bronfenbrenner’s exosystem and mac-
rosystem contain the outside settings in which the child
does not directly participate, but they still are also
originated by culture. Culture is what binds together
the various institutions, through the creation of
communities of practice that the child participates in
or is a part of.
In regard to the biological dimension, we stand by
Luria’s (1979) assertion that biology is in a subordinated
position to the social and the cultural historical. “Biol-
ogy and culture are not alternative influences but insep-
arable aspects of a system within which individuals
develop” (Rogoff, 1990, p. 28). Scientific research has
proven that its influence can transcend generations,
promoting vulnerability and predispositions as men-
tioned by Conrad Wassington’s term of “epigenetics.”
Presently, “the majority of environmental factors such
as nutrition or toxicants such as endocrine disruptors
do not promote genetic mutations or alterations in DNA
sequence. However, these factors do have the capacity
to alter the epigenome expression” (Skinner, Manikkam,
& Guerrero-Bosagna, 2010, p. 214). In addition, the
environment in which the individual resides might
change over time. The human capacity for adaptation,
both cultural and biological, will be tested when being
presented with new challenges in a series of diverse
conditions. The particular response to the exposure to
toxins, hazards, changes of diet and stressors, caretak-
ing changes, increasing school demands, and so on will
be a function of an adaptive system that has evolved
biologically and culturally up to now.
Diagrams serve as visual tools that facilitate the
understanding of theoretical ideas (Rogoff, 2003). How-
ever, the ways in which ideas are represented may
restrain or limit our understanding, more so when the
sketches intend to portray visual representations of
complex processes. Bronfenbrenner portrayed the sys-
tems that compose the ecological paradigm in a dia-
gram made out of concentric circles. This layout of
nested circles is questionable since it “separates person
and culture into stand-alone entities, with culture influ-
encing the person” (Rogoff, 2003, p. 49), contrasting
with our perspective that proposes individual develop-
ment not separated from its social and cultural-historical
context (Rogoff, 2003). Moreover, the separation of the
systems carries an implicit meaning about the hierarchi-
cal relationships between them, implying that the outer
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision 907
circles influence the inner ones, and the latter are
dependent on the systems in which they are embedded.
This is not consistent with our understanding of the
transformative and “mutually defining processes”
between individuals and cultural practices (Rogoff,
2003, p. 49).
In contrast, see Figure 3 for a visual representation
of the revised model. Instead of concentric circles, we
depict a spiral moved by the chronos dimension in
which culture exists within different settings, distal or
proximal in relation to the individual. It seeks to rep-
resent settings as cultural practices (cultural pathways)
that relate to the individual in mutually defining pro-
cesses, emphasizing the transactional nature of human
development.
We argue that cultural microsystems are justified
theoretically by the notions of cultural mediation in
Vygotsky’s theory, and the notions of cultural routines
and cultural pathways by the theories of Rogoff and
Weisner. Empirically, many cross-cultural studies have
validated a variety of cultural systems by paying atten-
tion to social activities, relationships, and negotiations
being done in everyday activities and how they affect
and shape human development.
Empirical Studies That Support the
Cultural Microsystems Paradigm Shift
We now present some examples of research that sup-
ports our revision of Bronfenbrenner’s model within a
cultural framework of daily practices, which is the main
reformulation we propose. Research within this frame-
work takes into account culture in every phase of the
research process, but especially in the conceptualization
and theoretical framework that defines and operational-
izes the research problem. For example, within the pro-
posed framework, quantitative research focuses on
measuring daily practices with instruments that are cul-
turally sensitive in both theory and adaptation. Qualita-
tive research focuses on describing and understanding
daily practices within a unique cultural framework.
Culture as part of family systems’
daily practices
Ren and Hu (2014) conducted a multiple-case study to
analyze maternal interaction strategies in four Chinese
families in Singapore and explored factors that influ-
ence choice of interaction strategies and some of the
Fig. 3. The cultural microsystem model. This figure portrays culture as existing
within different settings, distal or proximal in relation to the individual. It seeks
to represent settings as cultural practices (cultural pathways) that relate to the
individual in mutually defining processes, emphasizing the transactional nature
of human development.
908 Vélez-Agosto et al.
social, cultural, and contextual factors that shape it.
Among the differences found were that teaching moth-
ers had more control over the interaction than non-
teaching mothers and immigrant mothers tended to
solicit more active participation (Ren & Hu, 2014).
Therefore, this study highlights differences in contex-
tual and sociocultural factors that influence mother-
child interactions that could contribute to different
developmental processes. Other researchers, including
García Coll and colleagues (García Coll et al., 2002;
García Coll & Marks, 2009), have found that parental
involvement in children’s education varies widely
among immigrant groups. This is consistent with our
model in the sense that the communities and individu-
als can diversify the experience and interactions in a
specific context.
Research based on Weisner’s ecocultural theory has
also proven the shaping of culture in everyday routines
(Newland et al., 2013; Plowan, Stevenson, Stephen, &
McPake, 2011). McWayne et al. (2016) explore the
“niche profiles” of families engagement practices in a
group of low-income Spanish- and English-speaking
Latino families of preschool children. They found that
there is heterogeneity in the pattern of family engage-
ment practices among the families and demographic
factors were good predictors of the pattern on the lan-
guage group and have a relationship with children’s
social and language skills. These findings highlight the
importance of studying cultural practices in daily activi-
ties to comprehend heterogeneity within an ethnic
group. Furthermore, the study of routines facilitates the
recognition of factors that contribute to development.
Culture as part of schools and other
learning environments
Rogoff et al. (2007) suggest that “investigating the orga-
nization of children’s participation in routine activities
offers a way to address the dynamic nature of reper-
toires of cultural practices” (p. 490). Mejía-Arauz,
Rogoff, Dexter, and Najafi (2007) conducted a study to
explore peer interaction in three groups of children.
Results indicated that triads of children who had indig-
enous heritage and whose Mexican families had immi-
grated to the United States communicated more often
as a group, while the triads of children from European
heritage more frequently engaged dyadically or indi-
vidually. Triads of children from Mexican heritage with
maternal extensive schooling exhibited both patterns
of communication or resembled the European heritage
children. Thus, schooling and community participation
do not operate separately in a mechanistic fashion, but
rather “participation in institutions is an important
aspect of a constellation of related cultural practices
that contribute to children’s repertoires of social orga-
nization” (p. 1003). This study exemplifies how cultural
processes in different settings mediate children’s
approach to peer interactions and suggests that culture
is within everyday activity and routine practices. It also
illustrates the significant role that routine organizers
play in creating the settings that members of a com-
munity attend and the routine activities in which they
partake (Rogoff et al., 2007). Therefore institutionalized
rules lay out the foundations that structure human rela-
tions and communication, which occur in culturally
defined settings.
Tsethlikai and Rogoff (2013) conducted a study to
examine how cultural practices impact learning in two
groups of American Indian children. The results indi-
cated that children who were more engaged in cultural
activities in their community could recall the story with
more precision. This finding highlights the transactional
nature of development and how it is influenced by the
cultural contexts in which participation takes place. In
a similar fashion, Tonyan (2015) showed that family
child care providers’ descriptions of “culturally orga-
nized ideals of care, or cultural models, held by adults
can impact the kind of activities that children experi-
ence in their daily lives” (p. 312).
Culture as part of day care settings
Tonyan et al. (2013) used an ecocultural model to
develop a group-based approach to understand the
relationship between beliefs and practice on child care
providers from an archival analysis using the Observa-
tional Ratings of the Caregiving Environment. The
group-based approach managed to identify meaningful
groups of providers with shared beliefs, experiences,
and working conditions, and the characteristics of those
groups differed in observed behavior. In Rogoff’s (2003)
approach, beliefs and practices are only part of what
keep peoples and communities together.
McWayne et al. (2016) used the ecocultural perspec-
tive to investigate the distinct patterns of engagement
among 650 Spanish and English self-identified Latinos
primary caregivers of Head Start children with low
income and 38 teachers and to examine the relation
between the patterns, family demographic factors, and
children’s language and social skills. The findings sug-
gested that providers of care who reported low engage-
ment had less education than those who reported
average engagement. Parents of both language groups
(Spanish-speaking and English-speaking) who reported
high levels of engagement with children engaged in a
high level of supplemental practice (e.g., enrolling chil-
dren in classes outside of school). Moreover, there were
distinctions across the dimension of high-profile care
Bronfenbrenner’s Bioecological Theory Revision 909
provider between the Spanish- and English-speaking
subsamples. Ecocultural theory reminds us that the cul-
tural niches in which children and families live give us
indications of what communities, families, and children
have in common and value by their cultural heritage,
and their particular cultural constructions.
Conclusions
The importance of this revision lies in the fact that
Bronfenbrenner’s model guides not only research, but
also some important ways of thinking and serving com-
munities. Bronfenbrenner originally stated the impor-
tance of bridging social policy and developmental
research (Bronfenbrenner, 1974). His model has been
incorporated by major institutions worldwide (World
Health Organization, UNICEF) as one of the theoretical
backgrounds for social programs and research. Current
revisions of the model have been applied to new inter-
pretations of social policies as dynamic developmental
systems where the bioecological model’s key concepts
are used to inform different aspects of it (Foster & Kalil,
2005). Our revision incorporates Foster and Kalil’s
(2005) dimensions, but emphasizes that culture needs
to take an important role in public policy as the major
informant of processes, contexts, persons, and time.
Any social policy and social program should incorpo-
rate the analysis of how cultures operate in everyday
activity. Perhaps the successful implementation of new
public policies might be a function of how they are
relevant, incorporated, and supported by the cultural
microsystems.
In sum, the original conceptualization of how culture
operates in Bronfenbrenner’s bioecological model is
problematic because it is situated in a macrosystem, as
if operating externally from everyday activities, actions,
and routines in the microsystems. A revision of the
model from Vygotskian and neo-Vygotskian approaches,
like Rogoff’s and Weisner’s theories, led us to create a
new framework that situates culture as a critical part of
the microsystems as well as all other systems that the
microsystems are part of. We propose that the bioeco-
logical paradigm should be revised with a conceptual-
ization of culture operating as part of the microsystems.
Evidence to support our revision includes theoretical
definitions of culture as well as empirical studies where
culture is observed as part of daily routines and prac-
tices in families, peer settings, and child care and school
settings.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The authors declared that they had no conflicts of interest with
respect to their authorship or the publication of this article.
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