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Become a Better Facilitator: Investigate Your Teacher Talk. Amy McCarthy SFSU M.A. TESOL Conference December 2 , 2011. Do Your Classroom Discussions Ever Look Like This?. Would You Prefer Them to Look Like This?. Introduction: Project and Motivation.
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Become a Better Facilitator: Investigate Your Teacher Talk Amy McCarthy SFSU M.A. TESOL Conference December 2, 2011
Introduction: Project and Motivation • Low-intermediate non-credit class at Canal Alliance • Wanted to expand learner participation • More learners involved • Responses to each other • Investigated my teacher talk during class discussions • Audiotaped & transcribed
Presentation Overview • Background • My Project • Findings • Future Directions • Implications/Suggestions • Practical Tips
Background: What is Value of Teacher Talk in Discussion? • Sociocultural Perspective: Learning as social & collaborative (Antón, 1999; Foster & Ohta, 2005) • Teacher-learner interaction is model (Antón, 1999; Lee & Ng, 2010) • Scaffolding; e.g., vocabulary (Ko et al., 2003) • Building of classroom rapport (Byrne, 1987; Nyugen, 2007) • Teacher-fronted and learner-centered not mutually exclusive (Antón, 1999; Jacknick, 2009)
Background: What Kind of Teacher Talk? • Teacher in role of facilitator • Facilitative talk: How do we define? • Harder to define because less formulaic (Clifton, 2006)
Background: How to Study Teacher Talk? • Varied Approaches • Focus on specific features; e.g., questions • Use of quantitative ratios (Reinders et al. 2003; Wei, 2008) • Conversation Analysis: Qualitative -- teacher talk as part of jointly-constructed interaction • Context specific • Teacher investigation (Thornbury, 1996; Walsh, 2003) • Recording of interaction: “mirror-like ‘objective’ view of what goes on in class” (Schratz, 1992 as cited in Richards & Lockhart, 1994)
My Project: Context • Low intermediate non-credited integrated skills class at • Open enrollment: 14-20 Ss per night • From Latin America: Mexico, Guatemala, & El Salvador • Whole-class pre-reading discussions: • activating prior knowledge, predicting
My Project: Research Questions • What are existing patterns in teacher talk during class discussions? • How does my teacher talk affect learner participation? • What happens if I modify teacher talk? • Intentionally broad • “One can discover no more .. than one’s method of inquiry permits” (Heap, 1982, as cited in Lee, 2007)
My Project: Action Research Approach • “Self-reflective, critical, and systematic approach to your own teaching context” (Burns, 2010) • Reflective Intervention: From thinking to doing
My Project: Action Research Process • Three Cycles: 12 weeks • Action and Observation • Audiotaped & transcribed interaction • Reflection • Analyzed data & identified patterns • Kept Reflective Teaching Journal • Identified modifications to teacher talk • Further Action and Observation • Gradually introduced modifications in talk • Audiotaped & transcribed again
My Project: Method of Analysis • Initial quantitative analysis • Tally of features • e.g., clarification requests • Little insight into how teacher talk affected participation
My Project: Method of Analysis • Switched to primarily qualitative analysis • Insights from Conversation Analysis • Intimidating: terminology & transcription protocols • Interaction as jointly constructed • How does teacher talk create or block participation? • Turn-Taking Patterns: e.g., teacher-learner-teacher • Learner Initiation • Contingency
Findings: Example – Turn-Taking Patterns • Please look at Excerpt 1 (blue handout) • What do you notice about turn-taking pattern? • Does the teacher follow up after learner turn?
Findings: Turn-Taking Patterns • First Taping: somewhat rigid turn-taking • Learner turns bracketed by T turns • T follow-up move somewhat automatic • Minimal wait time after learner response (Garton, 2002) • My teacher talk blocking participation
Findings: Turn-Taking Patterns • Identified modifications to teacher talk • Consciousabout allowing wait time after learner response: time for others to respond • Conscious about making my follow-up move optional • Second Taping: more flexible turn-taking • Learners respond directly to each other • More learners participating
Findings: Example – Learner Initiation & Contingency • Learner initiation • Beyond direct response to my Q • Building on topic or bringing up related sub-topic (Adapted from Garton, 2002) • Contingency • “quality of interaction where the design of each turn is thoroughly dependent upon and reponsive to its prior turn” (Wong & Waring, 2010) • Please look at Excerpt 3 (blue handout)
Findings: Learner Initiation & Contingency • First Taping: • Took up learner initiative about ½ the time • Lack of contingency • Following own agenda • My teacher talk not supporting participation
Findings: Learner Initiation & Contingency • Identified modifications to teacher talk • Consciousabout learner initiation • Conscious about making my comments contingent • Keep in mind pedagogical goals: not too tangential • Second Taping: More space for initiation and contingency • Learner initiative taken up • Not just T, other learners responding • More learners participating
Future Directions • Focus on preparing students to participate • Raising awareness • Providing language and practice (Maeda, 2010; Sarosy & Sherak, 2002) • Continued focus on wait time • after learner response • Follow Action Research approach again
Implications / Suggestions • Biggest benefit: More awareness of interaction patterns (Thornbury, 1996; Walsh, 2003, 2006) • Investigate your teacher talk: understand & modify practice to be better facilitator • Action Research: take reflective teaching to new level • Useful insights from Conversation Analysis • Gradual process: like learning language
Practical Tips • Transcription very valuable, but be strategic • Saw patterns that weren’t obvious upon listening • Transcribe at least two discussion segments • Time consuming: later on, listen only • Introduce changes in teacher talk gradually • Allow time between tapings • Discuss with others • Don’t be too hard on yourself!
Many Thanks! • M.A. TESOL Professors & 891 Classmates • Advisors: Dr. Abeywickrama & Dr. Olsher • April Shandor • My wonderful students at Canal Alliance • My family • My cats, who sat by my computer while I worked on this project