1st Edition

Using Discourse Analysis to Improve Classroom Interaction

By Lesley A. Rex, Laura Schiller Copyright 2009
    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    This accessible 'how to' text is about classroom interaction – how to study it and how to use that knowledge to improve teaching and learning. Actually showing what critical, constructionist, sociocultural perspectives on teaching, learning, and schooling are and what they can do, it makes discourse analysis understandable and useful to teachers and other nonlinguists.

    Using Discourse Analysis to Improve Classroom Interaction:

    • offers teachers the powerful tools of discourse analysis as a way of understanding the complex dynamics of human interaction that constitute effective, equitable teaching and learning
    • guides readers step-by-step through how to build their interactional awareness to improve their teaching
    • includes 'Try It Out' exercises to engage readers in learning how to respond to the social dynamics of their classrooms for the purpose of improving classroom interaction.

    Proceeding from simple illustrations to more complex layering of analytical concepts, short segments of talk, transcribed to highlight important points, are used to explain and illustrate the concepts. By the time readers get to the complicated issues addressed in this text they are ready to deal with some of teaching’s toughest challenges, and have the tools to build positive relationships among their students so that all can participate equally in the classroom.

    Preface

    Acknowledgments

    PART ONE: "Reading" Conversations, Opening Possibilities

    Chapter 1

    Talking and Learning

    Chapter 2

    Assuming & Choosing

    Chapter 3

    Interacting & Positioning

    Chapter 4

    Identity & Worlds

    Chapter 5

    Interdiscursivity

    Chapter 6

    Power

    Chapter 7

    Building Knowledge

    PART TWO: CURRICULUM

    Introduction

    Chapter 8

    Positioning, Alignment, Stake, and Identity 1

    Chapter 9

    Positioning, Alignment, Stake, and Identity 2

    Chapter 10

    Minimizing Face Threats While Challenging Practice

    PART THREE: DIFFERENCE

    Introduction

    Chapter 11

    Clashes and Intersections of the Different Worlds of Teacher and Students, Case 1

    Chapter 12

    Clashes and Intersections of the Different Worlds of Teacher and Student, Case 2

    PART FOUR: Accountability and Assessment

    Introduction

    Chapter 13

    The Discursive Qualities of Inclusive Diverse Classrooms

    Chapter 14

    Interrogating Timed Prompted Writing in Professional Development Communities

    Chapter 15

    Reframing Accountability Measures: Repositioning Teachers and Students

     

    Epilogue

     

     

     

    Biography

    Lesley A. Rex is Faculty Leader of Secondary English Teacher Education, Co-Chair of the Joint Program in English and Education, and Associate Professor at the University of Michigan.

    Laura Schiller is a National Board Certified teacher, Director of the Oakland (MI) Writing Project, Literacy Consultant for Oakland (MI) Intermediate School District, and University of Michigan doctoral student.