Avoiding Dialogues of Non-Discovery through Promoting Dialogues of Discovery.

IF 1 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Dialogic Pedagogy Pub Date : 2015-03-09 DOI:10.5195/DPJ.2015.101
Kendall Richards, Nick Pilcher
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

International students and direct entrants—those entering a higher year of a degree—often come from socio-economic or cultural backgrounds different from traditional students, and have different educational backgrounds. It is assumed such students need help with unfamiliar assessment tasks such as essays, reports, and so on, and many sources aim to help with these elements. Further assumptions are that dialogue helps, and that the words used in such dialogue will be understood similarly. Yet, if the assumed meanings of the words actually differ, then such dialogue is based on a false assumption; rather than genuine dialogue, what actually occurs is an exchange of monologic utterances. This article is a structured narrative of our ongoing research into how key assessment task words such as ‘discuss,’ ‘analyse,’ and ‘critically evaluate’ are understood differently in higher education. We describe how such differences are perpetuated through Martin Buber’s (1947) ideas of monologic utterances, and what we call ‘dialogues of non-discovery’. Here we detail a research-based approach to promote genuine and technical dialogue: what we call ‘dialogues of discovery.’ We first introduce a dialogue that led to the genesis of the study and theoretical context of our dialogues with the literature. We then detail our methods of data collection in a section of ‘dialogues of exploration’. We present our findings in the form of categorizations of the different elements underpinning people’s understandings of ‘the word.’ Our own categorizations of these elements encourage dialogue around the elements of language, culture, stakeholder, subject, weight, and development over time. This is an approach we term an ‘anti-glossary approach’ in that it is opposite to, and against, ‘fixing’ or ‘ossifying’ the language in a glossary. In the Bakhtinian tradition of ‘incompletedness,’ we conclude by encouraging readers to take and adapt our findings as an ‘anti-glossary’ approach to engage in genuine and technical dialogue with their students. In this way, we believe the quality and depth of student work can improve.
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通过促进发现对话来避免非发现对话。
国际学生和直接入学的学生——那些进入更高一年学位的人——通常来自不同于传统学生的社会经济或文化背景,并且有不同的教育背景。假设这些学生需要帮助完成不熟悉的评估任务,如论文、报告等,并且许多资源旨在帮助这些元素。进一步的假设是,对话是有帮助的,在这种对话中使用的词语将被类似地理解。然而,如果假设的词的意思实际上不同,那么这种对话是基于错误的假设;而不是真正的对话,实际上发生的是一种独白的交流。本文结构化地叙述了我们正在进行的一项研究,即如何在高等教育中以不同的方式理解“讨论”、“分析”和“批判性评估”等关键评估任务词汇。我们描述了这种差异是如何通过马丁·布伯(1947)的单一话语的思想,以及我们所谓的“非发现对话”而得以延续的。在这里,我们详细介绍了一种基于研究的方法来促进真正的技术对话:我们称之为“发现对话”。“我们首先介绍了一段对话,这段对话导致了研究的起源,以及我们与文学对话的理论背景。然后,我们在“探索对话”部分详细介绍了我们的数据收集方法。我们将支持人们对“这个词”的理解的不同因素进行分类,并以此形式呈现我们的发现。“我们自己对这些元素的分类鼓励围绕语言、文化、利益相关者、主题、重量和发展等元素进行对话。这是一种我们称之为“反词汇方法”的方法,因为它与“固定”或“僵化”词汇表中的语言相反。在巴赫蒂尼的“不完整”传统中,我们鼓励读者采取并适应我们的发现,作为一种“反词汇表”的方法,与他们的学生进行真诚和技术性的对话。通过这种方式,我们相信学生作业的质量和深度可以得到提高。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Dialogic Pedagogy
Dialogic Pedagogy EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
12
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊最新文献
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