Student Negotiation of Collaborative Dialogues: The Roles and Resources Used in Unsupervised Conversations

IF 0.6 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS Unterrichtspraxis-Teaching German Pub Date : 2022-11-07 DOI:10.1111/tger.12208
Emily Groepper
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Responding to Donato and Brooks's (2004) call for undergraduate students to have more opportunities to engage in discourse at the advanced proficiency level, collaborative dialogues provide students with a situation conducive to language production and learning (Swain, 1997). As most of the research on collaborative dialogues has focused on the accuracy of language in a classroom environment, this article explores the various ways learners work together collaboratively to make meaning while discussing course content in the target language in dialogues taking place outside of class. Four student dyads with mixed proficiency levels completed weekly collaborative dialogues in an advanced undergraduate German literature course, and the dialogues were analyzed for patterns in role-taking and resource usage with an emphasis on how the students negotiated the task to complete it and make meaning. The students stayed on task during the dialogues and assumed the collaborative, expert, novice, dominant, and passive roles described by Storch (2002) during their discussion. They also relied almost solely on each other as linguistic resources.

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学生协作对话的协商:在无监督对话中使用的角色和资源
Donato和Brooks(2004)呼吁本科生有更多的机会参与高级水平的话语,协作对话为学生提供了一个有利于语言产生和学习的情境(Swain, 1997)。由于大多数关于协作对话的研究都集中在课堂环境中语言的准确性上,本文探讨了学习者在课外对话中用目的语讨论课程内容时共同协作以理解意义的各种方式。在一门高级本科德语文学课程中,四名熟练程度不一的学生完成了每周的合作对话,并分析了这些对话的角色扮演和资源使用模式,重点是学生如何协商任务以完成任务并产生意义。学生在对话过程中保持任务,并在讨论过程中扮演Storch(2002)所描述的协作、专家、新手、主导和被动角色。他们也几乎完全依赖彼此作为语言资源。
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Unterrichtspraxis-Teaching German
Unterrichtspraxis-Teaching German LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS-
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