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Doing Diversity: Teachers construction of their classroom reality New edition [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius: 220x150 mm, kaal: 280 g
  • Sari: Linguistic Insights 82
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-May-2009
  • Kirjastus: Verlag Peter Lang
  • ISBN-10: 3039116878
  • ISBN-13: 9783039116874
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 190 pages, kõrgus x laius: 220x150 mm, kaal: 280 g
  • Sari: Linguistic Insights 82
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-May-2009
  • Kirjastus: Verlag Peter Lang
  • ISBN-10: 3039116878
  • ISBN-13: 9783039116874
Teised raamatud teemal:
How teachers and students work together through discourse to construct their understanding of the context they live and work in will influence, in many different ways, the interaction within their classrooms. This book describes an indepth research that used ethnomethodology and conversation analysis to study three different groups of teachers. The study highlights the teachers perspectives concerning heterogeneity in the classroom, using recordings of discussions concerning cultural and linguistic diversity. Moreover, this research examines the discourse participants choice in the use (deployment) of categorical descriptions and reveals the speaker as positioned, interested and accountable for meaning construction. Thus, «portraits» of differing preservice and inservice teachers orientation towards linguistic and cultural diversity are analysed. By recognising these categorizations as partially bounded by previous knowledge and partially constructed in situ, the research sees meaning-making by teachers as a part of their lived work of teaching. It also reveals the social nature of these categorizations because they are an inseparable element of the socially constituted fabric of language in the environment of schooling and society.
Acknowledgements 5(4)
Introduction
9(6)
Immigration as a backdrop for socially constructed understanding of diversity
10(5)
Foreign language teaching as a tool for integration
12(3)
Studying the construction of diversity
15(20)
Foregrounding the researcher's position
17(3)
Who, what and where?
19(1)
Study approach: a diverse framework for dealing with diversity
20(4)
`My teacher is an alien' and other such membership devices
22(2)
Hearing voices / giving voices
24(1)
A new perspective on perspectives: What is meant by beliefs and categorisations?
25(10)
The Pygmalion Effect revisited
30(5)
Underlying theories of the study
35(24)
The multi-voiced fabric of this study
40(3)
Bridging the gap between micro and macro: An inextricable conundrum?
43(2)
What is Membership Categorisation Analysis?
45(14)
How does MCA work?
48(2)
Achieving meaning through `gaps'
50(2)
Recognizability and `accomplishing' a shared agreement of sense
52(1)
Indexicality, relevance and orientation
53(1)
Consequentiality and ethnification process
54(1)
Accountability and normative backdrop
55(1)
Why is Membership Categorisation Analysis relevant to teachers' perspectives?
56(3)
Doing diversity in the classroom
59(16)
Critical Pedagogy and Reflective Teaching Practice
61(2)
Interrogating language diversity and teaching practices in the language classroom
63(3)
Preliminary analysis: Pinpointing saliency and agency
66(9)
Catalogue of Category Assembly
68(7)
Constructing the classroom
75(32)
Participants' roles in the discussions and tasks
75(4)
Norms for the normal classroom
79(13)
One language is best - but which one?
89(3)
Ethnification process for constructing the `other'
92(15)
Accountability and resistance to accountability
96(4)
`Thinking in our reality'
100(7)
Doing `being a language teacher'
107(38)
Ethnification process: Casting the learner
115(9)
Who's responsible for their learning?
124(6)
The advantages of diversity
130(4)
Re-thinking diversity as a platform for equality
134(4)
Recasting the teacher
138(5)
New assessment of diversity
143(2)
Conclusion
145(10)
A few final words
150(5)
References 155(22)
Appendix 177(2)
Index 179
The Author: Melinda Dooly is a teacher and researcher at the Faculty of Education, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona (Spain). Her research interests lie in the use of ethnomethodology and conversation analysis to explore organizational features of talk-in-interaction. She is a member of Dylan, a European integrated research project which aims to identify the conditions under which Europes linguistic diversity can be an asset for the development of knowledge and economy.