REVIEW OF JOURNAL entitled ‘LEARNER INITIATIVES ACROSS QUESTION-ANSWER SEQUENCES: A CONVERSATION ANALYTIC ACCOUNT OF LANGUAGE CLASSROOM DISCOURSE’ by Fatemeh Mozaffari, Yazd University & Baqer Yaqubi, University of Mazandaran (2015)
The research conducted by
Mozaffari and Yaqubi investigates
learner-initiated responses to English language teachers’ referential
questions and learner initiatives after teachers’ feedback moves in
meaning-focused question-answer sequences to analyze how interactional practices of language
teachers, their initiation and feedback moves, facilitate learner initiatives. Classroom discourse
research has largely neglected learner initiative in this pedagogically
crucial arena. Addressing this pedagogical issue and drawing on
sociocultural theory and situated learning theory, this qualitative
study focuses on meaning-focused question-answer sequences to understand
whether unfolding sequences, as structured by teachers, solicit learner-initiated
participation. The data come from 10 videotaped and transcribed lessons from seven
English teachers and their intermediate level students, at four private language institutes in Iran, which
were analyzed within conversation analysis framework. Based on
detailed analysis of classroom episodes, a very small number of learner
initiatives was uncovered. The analysis revealed that several interactional
practices by teachers (addressing the whole class, extending
wait-time, encouraging student-student interaction, acknowledging response,
giving positive feedback, and using continuers) tend to prompt learners’ initiation and
learners can also create learning opportunities for themselves (following silence or following
their own or other initiation). To characterize the findings, a typology of
interactional acts that prompt solicited and unsolicited learner
initiation is also provided. Some episodes are analyzed and the implications
for teachers and teacher educators are also discussed.
Regarding
practical issues related to learning and teaching, the study analyzed the complex ways in which teachers’
interactive practices can influence the initiation
opportunities that can occur. Although a lot of factors may affect learner
initiation in the classroom such as teacher’s
teaching style, students’ learning style,
learning environment and other multicultural factors, teachers often dominate instruction and thus
their interactive practices seem to affect initiation
significantly. When teachers employ interactive practices to facilitate interactional space, students
will be more involved in the classroom by
the expansion of the IRF sequence because initiating does not happen naturally; it must be carefully planned
and encouraged. Teachers need to
be aware of the importance of learner voices
and the relationship between classroom interaction or language use and language learning to increase learning
opportunities including initiation opportunities.
Teacher education programs can also help teachers to understand interactional processes through, for
example, the study of classroom recordings and
lesson transcripts.
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