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E-raamat: Discourse, Dialogue and Technology Enhanced Learning

(Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society and a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, UK)
  • Formaat: 250 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Nov-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317429104
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: 250 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 19-Nov-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317429104

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Discourse, Dialogue and Technology Enhanced Learning is invaluable to all those wanting to explore how dialogic processes work and how we facilitate them. Dialogue is an important learning tool and it is by understanding how language affects us and how we use language to encourage, empathise, inquire, argue and persuade that we come closer to understanding processes of change in ourselves and our society.

Most researchers in Education will find themselves interpreting some form of data in the form of words; whether these words be explanations, conversations, narrations, reflections, debates or interviews and whether they are conducted through digital media or face-to-face. Discourse, textual or spoken, is therefore central to researching education. Each chapter focuses on the ways in which alternative levels of discourse analysis provide tools for the researcher, enabling insights into the way language works in learning, teaching practice and wider society.

Drawing on the authors own DISCOUNT discourse analysis coding scheme and including a wide range of dialogue examples, this book covers:











Why Dialogue? The Role of Dialogue in Education.





Debate: Learning to Argue and Arguing to Learn





Towards Meaning-Making: Inquiry, Narrative and Experience





The Role of the Significant Other: Facilitation, Scaffolding and Mediation





Inclusion, Collaboration and Community





Media, Mode and Digital Literacy





Researching Voices and Texts

Discourse, Dialogue and Technology Enhanced Learning will be an essential resource for all students, educators and educational researchers who have an interest in the role of discourse in educational contexts.
List of figures
x
List of tables
xi
List of dialogue examples
xiii
Preface xvi
Acknowledgements xviii
1 Why dialogue? The role of dialogue in education
1(16)
Note
14(1)
References
14(3)
2 Debate: learning to argue and arguing to learn
17(20)
Fallacies and the logical dialogue game
20(9)
Extending logical dialogue games to educational settings
29(6)
References
35(2)
3 Towards meaning-making: inquiry, narrative and experience
37(32)
Inquiry processes and experiential learning theory
38(14)
Bridging concrete and abstract representations
52(4)
Narrative and experiential learning
56(3)
Narrative, empathy and affect
59(5)
References
64(5)
4 The role of the significant other: facilitation, scaffolding and mediation
69(33)
Internalisation of higher psychological functions
71(1)
Scaffolding, orchestrating and teaching roles
72(3)
Exploratory talk and the guided construction of knowledge
75(4)
Maintaining direction and monitoring progress
79(10)
Regulating motivation: the affective dimension
89(3)
The computer scaffold
92(4)
References
96(6)
5 Inclusion, collaboration and community
102(34)
Working together or alone?
102(4)
Collaborative learning: the rationales
106(3)
Rationale (a): collaborating for deep subject learning -- the inquiry approach
109(5)
Rationale (b): towards self-directed learning
114(6)
Rationale (c): team-working -- learning to collaborate
120(3)
Towards joint enterprise: group development
123(6)
References
129(7)
6 Media, mode and digital literacy
136(32)
New literacies
138(3)
A case study of children's multimodal writing
141(21)
Implications for developing literacy
162(3)
Notes
165(1)
References
165(3)
7 Researching voices and texts
168(43)
Approaches to researching discourse
169(6)
Boundaries: episodes, exchanges and turns
175(4)
Exchanges: transactional roles
179(4)
Logical games and commitments
183(1)
Roles, teaching functions and learning functions
184(5)
Elemental moves (ME)and discourse moves (MD)
189(2)
Metastatements: team and task regulation
191(3)
Rhetorical predicates
194(1)
Inquiry: moves that ask questions
195(3)
Collaborative working: towards convergence
198(1)
Narrative moves
199(2)
Moves that inform and elaborate
201(1)
Reasoning and justifying
202(3)
Responding moves
205(1)
Summary
205(1)
Notes
206(1)
References
206(5)
8 Conclusion
211(5)
Appendix: transcription conventions 216(2)
Index 218
Rachel Pilkington is an Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society and a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, UK. She was formerly Senior Lecturer at Birmingham University, UK and has over 25 years experience in research and teaching.