Discourse
and Social Psychology (p. 94-187) – Potter and Wetherell
Chapter 5 – Self
It is so hard to get past traditional views of the
self. I suppose this is particularly
hard for me because of my background in psychology, where both trait and role
views of the self are central, and humanistic views of the self are
included. Trait theory is what Paula
Deen was relying on when she said that people who were “talking bad about her”
didn’t know her and when she told stories about her family. In telling her
family stories, she was trying to show her “self” as a static individual who
has always been the same and couldn’t possibly hurt others. This conception of the self is also what the
Myers Briggs is attempting to capture with its distinctions between introverts
and extraverts, those who sense and those who are intuitive, feelers and
thinkers, and judgers and perceivers.
This quote on page 98 about role theory stood out to me … “Like the
actor on the stage, a person’s actions are not expressive of a unique
personality, but expressive of their role, and most individuals are
interchangeable when it comes to role playing.”
I do think people act in certain ways because of the roles they play –
for me, those would be grad student, daughter, friend, and consultant, and I
think there is some common ground between all those acting within the
constraints of those various roles. I
can’t, however, buy the second part of that sentence – that individuals are interchangeable. I need to think some more about that… I guess
my views of the self are most closely connected to the humanistic view of the
self – which is summarized on page 100, “There is the role being acted out and
there is the actor’s real self, which guides the performance and, in some
sense, remains removed and alienated from the part being played.” This has been my assumption for most of my
life, and only with this course and these readings have I begun to consider an
alternative view.
There is a lot in Gergen’s view of the self that I
can appreciate – I like the terms “language based approaches to the self” and “a
discursive model of the self”, as much of what we do and how we interact is
through our language. I agree with every
part of this definition from page 102, “There is not ‘one’ self waiting to be
discovered or uncovered but a multitude of selves found in the different kinds
of linguistic practices articulated now, in the past, historically, and cross
culturally.”
This quote on page 104, also stood out to me – “The
methods of conceptualizing the self involved in different linguistic practices
have vital consequences for the positioning of people in society; they are not
neutral or without impact, they produce senses of the self which may be
negative, destructive, oppressive, as well as senses which might change and
liberate”.
As I was reading this view of the self, I was
reminded of a quote from Montaigne (college freshman philosophy class) – that
goes something like this… I do not
portray being, I portray passing. My
history is adapted to the moment. I may presently change, not only by fortune,
but by intention. If my mind could gain
a firm footing, I would not make essays, but it is always in apprenticeship and
on trial.
I feel like much of what I have “assumed” to be true
is up for debate now. Interesting that the authors talk about the first step in
DA is to be able to suspend beliefs and assumptions that we take for
granted. That is a pretty difficult thing
to do!
I am really curious about why so much of this
research was done in New Zealand (Aotearoa – “land of the long white cloud”)
and on the Maori people. Reading Recovery came from New Zealand, and Marie Clay
and Courtney Cazden did a great deal of work together in NZ. I am just so curious about all of these
connections. As I read about the Maori
culture, I was reminded of my experiences there when I visited there. Add the
movie, Whale Rider, to our growing list – it is all about Maori culture.
Chapter 6 – Categories
I feel like I have talked a great deal in my
previous blog posts about the idea of categories/labels in education and how
bothered I am by them. I agree with the authors
when they discussed the benefit of categories – we can organize and simplify
things, and we have common language to understand and communicate, especially
in particular fields. There are so many
things in Reading Recovery that we have particular names for, and “we” RR
people understand (but people not familiar with RR wouldn’t understand). I think I am bothered by categories when it
comes to applying them to people. My example last post about the kindergarten
teacher and the “autistic” child is a typical one – where a teacher (a very
well-meaning teacher) responds to the label and not to the child. I
thought the example on page 117 (with the dots on the tv screen) was a really
good one – what you see, how you see, is influenced by the category/label you
apply. Students with learning disabilities
in reading are treated in particular ways by teachers. And often, these ways are not very helpful to
their academic growth in reading.
Chapter 7 – from representation to repertoires
I was glad we had read the Gilbert and Mulkey
article before reading this chapter. The
chapter was a nice review. Again, I was
reminded of the whole phonics vs. whole language debate in reading, with both
camps using some of the features of the contingent repertoire (listed on page
151) to undermine the views of “the other side”. I happen to be right in the middle on this
one – kids need phonics and they need lots of authentic reading and writing to
learn to read (and this, I believe is true of all kids – whether you are
labeled as LD or not).
I thought “the truth will out device” was really
interesting. And, I can think of times when I have heard people use this device
as a way to conclude an argument or shut down a discussion – “Well, we are
going to due this scripted reading program for a few years and then we will
find out. Time will tell.” When people do this, it shuts down the
discussion of the present and puts off any further debate. On page 155, the authors say, “The TWOD allows
this version to be maintained while at the same time giving the speaker leeway
to apply the contingent repertoire to a wide range of persons, events, and even
whole scientific fields.”
Chapter 8 – How to analyze discourse
I thought this chapter was great to read before we
read the two dissertation proposals for Wednesday. We will have a framework of sorts to use to
think through what Price and Johnston proposed. I think it will be helpful for me to take a
few notes on the various sections and comment as I go.
Stage one: research questions
-
Varied questions asked in DA
-
Discourse is examined for its own sake –
not as something that represents something else.
-
“action oriented medium”
-
“The concern is exclusively with talk
and writing itself and how it can be read, not with descriptive acuity”
-
Question – how is discourse put together
and what is gained by this construction. “To summarize – our research questions
give priority to discourse, in any form, and ask about its construction in
relation to its function.”
Stage two: sample selection
-
Labor intensive approach (DA)
-
Reading and rereading
-
Success of a study is not dependent on
sample size
-
“The crucial determinant of sample size,
however, must be, here as elsewhere, the specific research question.”
(Comment: I am thinking about the article I read for
my critique and how he looked at change over time in identity development. I am wondering if I could look at a child’s
Reading Recovery lesson series- 20 weeks max- and look at how some aspect of
the teacher/child interaction changes.
Maybe it is the child’s identity, or the child’s independent action, or
the language exchanges between teacher and child – more directive and
controlled at the beginning, and more child driven at the end. So many options.).
Stage three:
-
Work with records and documents of
interaction (not about the researcher interactions).
-
Transcripts that happen between
participants (not researcher generated)
-
“ … you can use people’s own ability to
artfully (and very helpfully) poke holes in each others’ positions to reveal
their constructed nature.”
-
Need high quality recording device.
Stage four:
-
“interviews have the virtue of allowing
the researcher room for active intervention”
-
“enable the researcher to deliberately
question an entire sample of people on the same issue, giving greater
comparability in responses, and increased simplicity in initial coding”
(I understand this
completely…but, if we are after “what naturally occurs”, interviews are not
necessarily the best avenue to take. The
researcher is guiding this, and it is not natural. Of course, neither is putting a tape recorder
down and picking up on what people are saying.
There is interference either way to some degree. Interviewing seems to
be more imposing.)
-
“the goal of traditional interviews is
to obtain or measure consistency in participants’ responses; consistency is
valued so highly because it is taken as evidence of a corresponding set of
actions or beliefs.”
-
Consistency matters in DA, but not in
the same way. Important if researcher
wants to think about patterns of language.
-
“Consistency is often less useful and
desirable for analysis than variation in interviews.”
-
Idea of tackling the same topic in more
than one way (to see if there is variability)
-
Whole interview should be transcribed –
the way the interviewer asks the question is important.
Stage five: transcription
-
“A good transcript is essential for a
form of analysis which involves repeated readings of sections of data, and the
process of transcription itself can be helpful in forcing the transcriber to
closely read a body of discourse.”
-
“Transcription is a constructive and
conventional activity. The transcriber
is struggling to make clear decisions about what exactly is said, and then to
represent those words in a conventional orthographic system (Stubbs, 1983).
-
Have to think carefully about what info
is needed from the transcript, and how analysis will go.
-
Total immobility and panic might be part
of the process!
-
(I am wondering about how/when you know
to use Jeffersonian transcription…after you have read and analyzed enough that
you are beginning to see what is important?)
Stage six:
coding
-
Categories related to research questions
of interest.
-
“ … as coding has the pragmatic rather
than analytic goal of collecting together instances for examination it should
be done as inclusively as possible.”
-
“At this stage in the research we are in
the business of producing a body of instances, of trying to set limits to that
body.”
Stage seven: analysis
-
Riding a bike, not baking a cake!
-
No mechanical process.
-
“… the results of studies of discourse
are warranted, and critically examined, in a way that is novel to psychology.”
-
“The skills required are developed as
one tries to make sense of transcript and identify the organizational features
of documents”
-
Have to read and reread.
-
“Often it is only after long hours
struggling with the data and many false starts that a systematic patterning
emerges.”
-
Don’t read for gist, read for specifics –
the detail in passages.
-
Phase 1 – search for pattern in the
data. Both in the form of variability
(differences in content or form of accounts) and consistency (features shared
by accounts).
-
Phase 2 – concern with function and
consequence
-
“The basic theoretical thrust of
discourse analysis is the argument that people’s talk fulfills many functions
and has varying effects”
-
Phase 2 is about forming hypothesis
about these functions and searching for linguistic evidence.
-
(This sounds so RR to me. You go over and over and over how a
kid/teacher did something, and you form a tentative theory about what is going
on. Not about the general, it is about the particular in the interaction and in
the words between teacher and child).
Stage eight: validation
-
Can validate the findings of DA in a
number of ways – 4 main ones listed…
1) Coherence
– analysis focuses on how discourse works together and how the structure
produces effects and functions.
Exceptions are relevant. “Cases
that lie outside the explanatory framework of a theory are almost always more
informative than those that lie within, and often dredge up important problems.”
2) Participants’
orientation – interested in … “distinctions participants actually make in their
interactions and which have important implications for their practice.” What do participants see as consistent and
different – that is what is important.
3) New
problems – looking at “linguistic resources” that make things happen. Solve problems, but also create problems. “The
existence of new problems, and solutions, provides further confirmation that
linguistic resources are being used as hypothesized.
4) Fruitfulness
– “an analytic scheme to make sense of new kinds of discourse and to generate
novel explanations”
These techniques allow for stringent examination of
claims.
Stage nine: the report
-
Want to write in such a way that the
reader can critique your interpretations.
-
“Thus a representative set of examples
form the area of interest must be included along with a detailed interpretation
which links analytic claims to specific parts or aspects of the extracts.”
-
“In this sense discourse analysis could
be said to be more rigorous than experimental reports as it is often impossible
to independently check the analysis in these cases.”
-
Analytic section will be longer. Extracts from the transcripts will be
included – as well as detailed interpretations.
-
“In discourse analysis the extracts are
not characterizations or illustrations of the data, they are examples of the
data itself.”
-
Do a rough draft of analysis and
discussion early.
-
“Discourse analysis involves fluid
movement between the different stages, with coding, analysis, validation and
writing each leading back to earlier phases and ultimately to the talk and
writing which were the original point of departure.”
Stage ten: application
-
“It is implied that a discipline
concerned with language and its function will perhaps be of abstract interest
but no practical use.”
-
Atkinson’s CA work on political rhetoric
– helps people be more aware and critical.
-
Open up a dialogue
-
“The main point is that application is
very much on the agenda and should not be relegated to an optional extra.”
Conclusions
-
No method to discourse analysis in the
way we traditionally think of an experimental method
-
Broad theoretical framework – about the
nature of discourse and its role in social life, “along with a set of
suggestions about how discourse can best be studied and how others can be
convinced findings are genuine”
Chapter 9 – Controversial topics and future
directions
“Our focus is exclusively on discourse itself: how
it is constructed, its functions, and the consequences which arise from
different discursive organization. In
this sense, discourse analysis is a radically non-cognitive form of social
psychology.”
-
Language of self and mental life is
public (through talk) and there for analysis.
-
“Much of the phenomenon of the mind is
intersubjectively constituted as the person speaks, writes, reminisces, talks
to others and so on.” (internal workings of the mind are a non-issue….because
you have public info to analyze).
-
“Understanding is assessed by public
criteria and practical tests.”
(This made me think of how we view
reading comprehension. What kids reveal
in their writing and in their speaking about a book is their comprehension.)
Future directions
Examination of complex texts (children’s stories –
what are the ‘stories’ of struggling readers?
Rhetoric – use of language to persuade (is RR training
an act of ‘persuasion” – to get teachers to buy into a way of interacting with
kids to teach reading?)
Concerns in the area of ideology
Advantageous that discourse is everywhere!
Love the movie Whale Rider :) I am not sure where all the NZ connections come from but it would be interesting to find out - perhaps someone at Loughborough is from there originally?
ReplyDeleteThe TWOD reminded me of the finding from Gabriel & Lester "well, it's the best we have." Also effective at shutting down discussion, but in a slightly different way.
"I am wondering if I could look at a child’s Reading Recovery lesson series- 20 weeks max- and look at how some aspect of the teacher/child interaction changes. Maybe it is the child’s identity, or the child’s independent action, or the language exchanges between teacher and child – more directive and controlled at the beginning, and more child driven at the end. So many options." So, I am noticing that in everyone's reflections on how this can be used in research there is this tendency to want to identify "change" - either over time, or between people, etc. I suppose this is a carry over from quantitative paradigms where we are "measuring things". I don't think that you necessarily even need to get to the "change" or "differences between groups" part - what is so important is just documenting what is happening in the moment. This may be a naive view on my part - I am genuinely trying to think through why the focus on "change" (or difference between groups) bothers me. Maybe to me it signals the lingering legacy of experimental designs being the norm...What do you think?
"I am wondering about how/when you know to use Jeffersonian transcription…after you have read and analyzed enough that you are beginning to see what is important?" This is a great question to ask Joshua and Elizabeth! Keep in mind that I use work mostly with online talk in my own studies and so no transcription is required.