INSTITUTIONAL DISCOURSE III: EDUCATION Flashcards
HOW DISCOURSE IN EDUCATION HAS BEEN STUDIED
empirical sites for discourse research in education (Rogers, 2005):
- Textbooks constructing beliefs, values and identities
- Gender in learning
- Meetings: administrative, special education committee
- Classrooms of different kinds: science, social studies, literature
- After-school programs
- Home schooling
- Policy analysis at local, regional and national levels
- Testing and standards
- Book order forms
- Critical literacy
- Multimodality and new literacy texts
MANY DISCOURSE PARTICIPANTS
- Teachers / lecturers
- Children / pupils / students
- Local management (head teachers, heads of department, heads of year, heads of subject)
- Parents and families
+ institutions
THE SPOKEN GENRE OF CLASSROOM DISCOURSE
- Traditional patterns (Sinclair and Coulthard 1975)
- Teacher keeps one-at-a-time rule
- Allocating turns and controlling questions
- Re-establishing order when necessary
- Turn-taking structure of IRF/IRE
- Initiation, Response, Feedback/Evaluation
- Little (spoken) competition for floor, few overlaps
- Longer gaps than in normal conversation
- Negative feedback mitigated
TYPICAL IRE CLASSROOM PATTERN
Teacher positioned as
- keeper of knowledge
- controller of the interaction
- evaluator of what counts as knowledge in the classroom
- > Institutionally and interactionally powerful role
- Pupils positioned as
- displayers of knowledge
- subjects of evaluation
- > Unequal distribution of communicative rights and obligations
Consequences of traditional classroom discourse structure:
- Familiar, structured pattern
- Pupils may focus more on figuring out what the teacher wants to hear than on learning
- Interactional troubles when pupils can’t fill the R slot appropriately
NON-TRADITIONAL CLASSROOM DISCOURSE
Collaborative learning, drawing on Vygotskyan perspectives (1978);
Consequences of non-traditional classroom discourse structure:
- Opens up other possibilities for learning
- Locus of control can shift to different participants at different times
- Can be difficult to negotiate for students coming from classrooms with more traditionaldiscourse structures
REASONS FOR CHANGE IN CLASSROOM DISCOURSE
- Educational research
- Social change – decline of deference
- Parents’ agendas
- Pupils’ needs, experiences, situations
- Policy commitments
- At national level
- At local level
- Mediated through inspection requirements