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Discourse Analysis and the Study of Classroom Language and Literacy Events: A Microethnographic Perspective

TLDR
In this paper, a micro-ethnographic approach to discourse analysis of classroom language and literacy events is presented, focusing on how people use language and other systems of communication in constructing classroom events with attention to social, cultural, and political processes.
Abstract
The authors present a social linguistic/social interactional approach to the discourse analysis of classroom language and literacy events. Building on recent theories in interactional sociolinguistics, literary theory, social anthropology, critical discourse analysis, and the New Literacy Studies, they describe a microethnographic approach to discourse analysis that provides a reflexive and recursive research process that continually questions what counts as knowledge in and of the interactions among teachers and students. The approach combines attention to how people use language and other systems of communication in constructing classroom events with attention to social, cultural, and political processes. The focus of attention is on actual people acting and reacting to each other, creating and recreating the worlds in which they live. One contribution of the microethnographic approach is to highlight the conception of people as complex, multi-dimensional actors who together use what is given by culture, language, social, and economic capital to create new meanings, social relationships and possibilities, and to recreate culture and language. The approach presented by the authors does not separate methodological, theoretical, and epistemological issues. Instead, they argue that research always involves a dialectical relationship among the object of the research, the theoretical frameworks and methodologies driving the research, and the situations within which the research is being conducted. Discourse Analysis and the Study of Classroom Language and Literacy Events: A Microethnographic Perspective: *introduces key constructs and the intellectual and disciplinary foundations of the microethnographic approach; *addresses the use of this approach to gain insight into three often discussed issues in research on classroom literacy events--classroom literacy events as cultural action, the social construction of identity, and power relations in and through classroom literacy events; *presents transcripts of classroom literacy events to illustrate how theoretical constructs, the research issue, the research site, methods, research techniques, and previous studies of discourse analysis come together to constitute a discourse analysis; and *discusses the complexity of "locating" microethnographic discourse analysis studies within the field of literacy studies and within broader intellectual movements. This volume is of broad interest and will be widely welcomed by scholars and students in the field language and literacy studies, educational researchers focusing on analysis of classroom discourse, educational sociolinguists, and sociologists and anthropologists focusing on face-to-face interaction and language use.

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Citations
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Book ChapterDOI

An Introduction to Critical Discourse Analysis in Education

TL;DR: The authors introduce key concepts and issues in critical discourse analysis and situate these within the field of educational research, and invite readers to consider the theories and methods of three major traditions of critical discourse studies through the empirical work of leading scholars in the field.
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The "academic literacies" model: Theory and applications

Mary R. Lea, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2006 - 
TL;DR: The concept of academic literacies was originally developed with regard to the study of literacies in higher education and the university, but the concept also applies to K-12 education.
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Framing Interactions to Foster Generative Learning: A Situative Explanation of Transfer in a Community of Learners Classroom

TL;DR: The authors developed a situative approach to explain the transfer of learning, illustrating it using a challenging-to-explain case from a Fostering Communities of Learners classroom, which involved a group of 5th graders who learned and then transferred a more sophisticated way of explaining species survival and endangerment despite participating in a unit in which many activities designed to foster transfer were short circuited.
Journal ArticleDOI

Literacy and Identity: Examining the Metaphors in History and Contemporary Research.

TL;DR: The authors reviewed various ways of conceptualizing identity by using five metaphors for identity documented in the identity literature: difference, sense of self/subjectivity, mind or consciousness, narrative, and position.

Theory and Practice in Language Studies

TL;DR: In this article, the problems in teaching tenses to Turkish students at university level in Turkey have been studied and most frequently occurred errors have been listed and they have been analyzed in detail, which revealed that the reasons for these errors mostly derive from mother tongue interference and lack of adequate linguistic background.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Toward a Theory of Culturally Relevant Pedagogy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose a culturally relevant theory of education for African-American students in the context of collaborative and reflexive pedagogical research, and explore the intersection of culture and teaching that relies solely on microanalytic or macro-analytic perspectives.

A pedagogy of Multiliteracies Designing Social Futures

Bill Cope, +1 more
TL;DR: The authors argue that the multiplicity of communications channels and increasing cultural and linguistic diversity in the world today call for a much broader view of literacy than portrayed by traditional language-based approaches.
Book

An Introduction to Discourse Analysis: Theory and Method

TL;DR: An Introduction to Discourse Analysis as discussed by the authors is an essential textbook for all advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students of discourse analysis and can be used as a stand-alone textbook or ideally used in conjunction with the practical companion title How to do Discourse analysis: A Toolkit Together they provide the complete resource for students studying discourse analysis.
Book

Context and Culture in Language Teaching

TL;DR: The importance of context in language education is discussed in this article, where the authors propose a discourse perspective to teach the spoken language across the cultural faultline and to reconstruct the C2 context of production and reception in the learner's native culture C1", C2": in the eyes of others.