Tác giả CN Lee, Josephine.
Nhan đề Collaborative Planning in Process :An Ethnomethodological Perspective /Josephine Lee, Alfred Rue Burch.
Thông tin xuất bản 2017
Mô tả vật lý p. 536–575.
Tóm tắt Following Ellis s (2005) call for more social and process-oriented planning research, this study explores how learners approach collaborative planning tasks in the classroom as a locally contingent activity in situ. Drawing on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, the present study focuses on a group planning stage that precedes the final task of delivering a presentation. Fine-grained analyses of the interaction reveal that group planning is essentially a nonlinear, social, and pragmatic activity wherein the students manage participant roles, resolve disputes and misunderstandings, and collectively work toward effective task completion. These findings highlight that, although the groups begin with the same task-as-workplan (Breen, 1987; Seedhouse, 2005), the students’ concerns are driven by locally constructed goals and plans-in-process, and as they work toward a group consensus they are required to deal with a wide range of social and interactional contingencies.
Đề mục chủ đề Student--Study--Study plan--Working group
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Student
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Study
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Study plan
Thuật ngữ không kiểm soát Working group
Tác giả(bs) CN Burch, Alfred Rue.
Nguồn trích Tesol Quarterly- Volume 51, Issue 3 September 2017
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520|aFollowing Ellis s (2005) call for more social and process-oriented planning research, this study explores how learners approach collaborative planning tasks in the classroom as a locally contingent activity in situ. Drawing on ethnomethodology and conversation analysis, the present study focuses on a group planning stage that precedes the final task of delivering a presentation. Fine-grained analyses of the interaction reveal that group planning is essentially a nonlinear, social, and pragmatic activity wherein the students manage participant roles, resolve disputes and misunderstandings, and collectively work toward effective task completion. These findings highlight that, although the groups begin with the same task-as-workplan (Breen, 1987; Seedhouse, 2005), the students’ concerns are driven by locally constructed goals and plans-in-process, and as they work toward a group consensus they are required to deal with a wide range of social and interactional contingencies.
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