Discourse
Analysis and Discursive Psychology – Jonathan Potter
I
read this article in my office on campus last Thursday. As I was reading, I texted my partner, “I
think this might be it…what I want to do for my dissertation”. As I was reading this article, I was
filtering the information through the lens of what I have done for the last 7
years in Reading Recovery and what I anticipate focusing on in my dissertation
(either how Reading Recovery Teacher Leader professional development happens or
on how language/teaching interactions happen between Reading Recovery student
and Reading Recovery teacher).
Briefly, Reading
Recovery is a first grade intervention that offers one to one tutoring to 1st
grade students who are in the bottom 20% of their cohort according to teacher
ranking and a battery of assessments called The Observation Survey of Early
Literacy Achievement. The aim of the
intervention is to accelerate the literacy achievement of the student so that
she is in the average of her class (in less than 20 weeks of 1 to 1, daily, 30
minute lessons in reading, writing, and word/letter study). The intervention has been around in the
states since 1984 and has been in New Zealand (where it originated… in part from
a dissertation...) since the late 1970s.
It has evolved and changed with current research and educational demands
and is not only widely used in the states, but also in New Zealand, England,
Australia, and Department of Defense
Schools (among others). Additionally,
the text (both professional and student) have been translated into Spanish,
French, and German. The intervention
is highly successful, with approximately 75-80% of students achieving “average”
or better levels of proficiency in 20 weeks or less. There has been considerable research done on
RR – especially the training of teachers, but, there hasn’t been much on the
“turn by turn” interactions between teacher and child or the professional
development or training of Teacher Leaders (who are trained by University
professionals at regional training sites and then train teachers in their
school districts).
James
Britton said, “Comprehension floats on a sea of talk”. This is a basic premise of professional
development for Reading Recovery professionals.
They “talk” together and are prompted by a RR Teacher Leader as they
watch a live lesson unfold behind a one way mirror – “behind the glass” is the
term in Reading Recovery. In one room,
there is a Reading Recovery teacher and child doing a lesson as they typically
do. The child reads a number of books,
writes a story, works with words and letters etc. They are seated at a table in
front of what looks like a mirror. They
can see themselves but not the teachers seated directly behind the glass on the
other side. There is a microphone
picking up all the action. In the
adjoining room, there are the Reading Recovery Teacher Leader (who is guiding
the discussion) standing by the “glass” and Reading Recovery teachers who are
seated in chairs facing the glass so they can watch the lesson and talk about
what they are noticing, wondering, and questioning. Typically, the training session involves
viewing two lessons “behind the glass” (2 different teachers and children) in
the manner described above and an after the glass discussion. The two teachers who taught behind the glass
are part of the after the glass discussion.
The focus of the talk after the lessons is not on fixing the teacher or
child, but rather on reflecting on what was seen and wondered about, as it
compares to what we know about emergent reading and writing through core early
literacy text. Those texts are consulted
and read from and discussed as lesson examples are recounted and reflected
upon.
I
provided that brief (believe me, I could have written for pages and pages on
this training) description so that when I reflect on this article below, my
comments have a place to land….
Reading
Recovery is all about reflecting upon teacher/child interaction as it
occurs. It is heavily influenced by
Vygotsky’s work and the notion of “the zone of proximal development”. It seems a natural fit with DP and DA. I
underlined “This is the stuff of real life. It is a recording of how the
interaction unfolds for the participants” on the first page. And, there is SO much interaction that is
taking place. There is the teacher and
student, and then there are the teachers themselves as the lesson is
happening. Additionally, there are
sessions that involved the University trainers who are focusing on how the RR
Teacher Leader is guiding and responding and questioning teacher assumptions in
the discussion.
On
page 3, it says “… some of the big
issues of social relations played out, in particular the sociological truism
that power and resistance go together.”
To me, Reading Recovery has a very different “power” kind of structure
than most educational initiatives I have been involved in over the last 15
years. There is no “Truth” with a
capital “T” – what works for one child in one situation and may be appropriate
may be completely inappropriate for another child. There is no hard and fast “rule book” about
how things are “to be done”. All teacher
actions are subject to questioning and review and scrutiny in light of how the
child responded. Teachers are charged
with “following the child” and many new-to-Reading-Recovery-teachers are
disturbed by this. They hold very
tightly to an idea of what a “struggling” reader needs instead of looking at
this particular learner and what he is she is responding to or not responding
to. There is also a difference in the
power structure between teachers. It
doesn’t matter if you have a PhD, have taught for 20 years, have tenure, and
were named as “teacher of the year” for your building. If you prompt a child and create confusion
for the child, you will be questioned by your fellow Reading Recovery
teachers. It is the moment with the
child that matters – not the labels you apply to yourself (or others have
applied to you). It is very unnerving
for many teachers to be questioned and some teachers can’t hack the questioning
and decide that Reading Recovery does not work for them. In my experience, those that leave are those
that cling very tightly to beliefs about themselves, or “struggling students”,
or “curriculum” and cannot think about a particular child and what he/she needs
in the moment. I thought it was very
interesting that this article says that these issues of power and resistance
are central issues to discursive psychology.
They are central issues in Reading Recovery too – though perhaps not
formally recognized (which might make it good for research).
Before
a professional development session in Reading Recovery, which involves those
“Behind the glass” sessions, I always feel a certain amount of anxiety and
excitement. As a teacher leader, you
never know what will take place. You
can’t script what you want to say to/with the teachers ahead of time. You have to stay in the moment (just as the
teacher does with the child) and respond to the “interaction as it unfolds in
real time and in real situations” (p. 4).
DP and RR share that focus on real life interaction.
On
page 5, Potter says that DP is focused on the “public realm” – so is RR. RR is not concerned with what you say you do
when you teach a child. Often, what we
say we do and what we actually do are not the same. I may think I am holding a child accountable
for the independent production of the problem letter “b”. I may claim that the child can make the
letter consistently without error and without prompting. But, when I go behind the glass, what I REALLY
do is revealed in my actions – I use language to prompt the child through the
production – “stick down, bubble around”, or I supply a magnet letter for the
child to look at as he writes, or I say “be careful” to slow the child before
he begins. Those actions are mine – not
the independent actions of a child.
So, in RR there is little “description of the child” by the teacher for
the other teachers. It is what it is
when the child and teacher interact behind the glass.
At
the bottom of page 6, when Potter is talking about the talk about the British royal family and
certain talk that keeps hierarchies in place, I thought about how sometimes
teachers’ talk and assumptions about “struggling” readers work to keep kids
‘down’. There is often a litany of
“can’t do” that teachers hang onto when they are working with “struggling
student”. Sometimes it is their
assumption about a child that holds the child back – not the actual ability of
the child. For example, a teacher may
provide a very high level of modeling or scaffolding for a child when it is not
necessary. A teacher jumps in and
corrects the child before giving her a chance to notice and correct a
mistake. The kid could have the ability
to make a correction but if the teacher intervenes and does it, the assumption
she takes away from the interaction is that the child lacks initiative and
doesn’t correct mistakes – which is not true.
The teacher didn’t allow the child the opportunity. So, I am thinking about how DP could be
used to examine the talk of RR teachers … and how there may be talk about
children that keeps them at risk and in jeopardy.
On
page 7, Potter is describing Strand 2 which is focused on interaction and not
on transcripts of open ended interviews.
This speaks to what I mentioned before – what teachers do and what
teachers say they do are often very different things! I have had to replay video for teachers
before to get them to actually see what they were doing in interaction with students
rather than rely on what they believed they were doing.
Strand
three: Discursive Psychology and Sequential Analysis seemed VERY appropriate to
all things Reading Recovery – all the characteristics fit, especially – a –
working with a corpus of conversational material, d – attention to
psychological phenomena in institutional settings, and e – integration of
lexical analysis with attention to prosody, delivery, and embodied action. Jeffersonian transcript seems very difficult
and tedious, but I am hopeful it could be very useful when looking at Reading
Recovery lessons or interactions among teachers.
In
Reading Recovery, there develops a body of shared knowledge and
understanding. Through both talk and
action, teachers show what they know about how students develop efficient
reading and writing processes and how to foster that development in students. The teacher leader is constantly assessing
where teachers are in their understanding and prompting to get them to reveal
more (through language) about what they understand. It is interesting – sometimes teachers can
‘talk the talk’ all day to let you know they understand, and they teach and
cannot apply with children what they are able to describe in words. And, I have seen the opposite – teachers who
cannot explain the rationale behind a decision, but can make very effective
teaching decisions. The latter problem
is much easier to work with!
I
loved this next section, and made even more clear to me how my potential topics
connect with discursive psychology.
1) Discourse
is action oriented.
“Consider the use of questions to indirectly deliver advice” – this
happens all the time in RR when teachers prompt students for action. Clay says, “Prompts are not just talk, they
are a call to action to the child to do something within his response repertoire
to solve a problem.” I am thinking of
when teachers say, “Does that make sense?” to a child. It is often a call for the child to reread a
section of text to check that all is correct.
I thought the explanation of how discourse analytic work is different
from just work around language was important – it is all about the action.
2) Discourse
is situated.
This section addresses the turn by turn interaction that is so important
in Reading Recovery. The teacher is
constantly issuing an “invitation” to the student to engage in the literacy
event. “When an invitation is issued
this sets up an environment for what happens next”... Clay could have said this quote – “the turn
by turn unfolding of talk provides an ongoing check on understanding” – this is
true for both the teacher/child interaction and the teacher/teacher leader and
teacher/teacher actions. I liked the
part about “identity” and think it could fit with both teachers and
children. Children generally come into
RR with an idea of themselves as someone who finds reading hard. It is amazing to watch that concept and
identity shift as they progress through the lesson series and have some
successes with literacy learning. Often,
this change in self-concept is revealed through their words – they will
spontaneously talk about their problem solving or say “I am a good reader” or
“I wrote a long story” etc. The teacher
part of the identity is really interesting too.
As I mentioned earlier, it is sometimes difficult. They have the identity of “teacher of the
year” but in this new setting they are not as settled and are questioned
regularly. Some find this incredibly
uncomfortable. It can go the other way
too, that teachers develop confidence and a refined ability to make quick and
efficient decisions. Potter says,
“Discourse research highlights, for example, the way descriptions are built to
counter actual or potential alternatives”.
In Reading Recovery, teachers think lots about alternative explanations
for happenings. If the child says have
for had was it because he didn’t look all the way to the end of the word, or
was it because he was reading in present vs. past tense, or is it because of
his particular reliance on certain language structures? Teachers would look for patterns over time as
the child read in order to answer those questions. The themes of attribution, attitudes and
persuasion also seem to fit for Reading Recovery as well as discursive
psychology.
3) Discourse
is both constructed and constructive. I am wondering about
this sentence “Discursive research can be focused on the way constructions are
built and stabilized, and how they are made neutral, objective, and independent
of the speaker.” I am thinking that how
a Reading Recovery teacher leader or teacher develops might be interesting…. Or
how their ideas about struggling readers change as they go through
training. The last sentence of this
section fits with these topics – how kids and teachers change over time is
subtle and is revealed through both their language and actions.
4) Discourse
is produced as psychological.
I want to think through both of my topics with these
7 stages in mind. This might help me in
later writing my methodology section for the Digital Tools class.
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Interactions between RR teacher and RR
child
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Reading Recovery Teacher Leader
professional development
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Obtaining access and consent
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I
could look at interactions between teacher and student through a local school
district where I used to work. There are currently 20 RR teachers and they
each teach 4 children one on one for half a day. I have a good reputation with teachers,
principals, and central office staff, and believe they would allow me
access. Working with parents to get
permission would be the most problematic aspect. Their child is already viewed as a
struggling reader and they may not be comfortable having a researcher writing
about their child. If the teacher was
just audio recording the daily interactions, that might be okay…but, it would
be really useful to have video. I have a particular teacher in mind. We worked together in the past, have a
strong relationship, and she is a teacher who is open to learning. She would welcome the scrutiny and close
observation of her teaching.
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Teacher
leaders at trained regionally through GSU in Atlanta. They are also trained at OSU in
Columbus. I have connections in both
places and believe I could get access to either site. I would prefer GSU, because of my stronger
connections there.
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Data
Collection
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I
could ask the teacher to video/audio RR lessons every day for as long as the
child is in RR. This ‘archive of
records’ would be daily, for 30 minutes, for up to 20 weeks. I would consult with the schools systems IT
people to find the best devices for recording etc. I would purchase them myself. Having this dearth of information could be
useful later for other research projects – not just my dissertation.
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Reading
Recovery Teacher Leader training takes place in a variety of ways. The TLs take reading theory courses which
are seminar style and involve a great deal of discussion and reflection on
reading research. This would be
important to record (audio probably) because teachers reveal their beliefs
about reading practice through their comments in discussion. How they change over time would be
revealed. The RRTLs also have
“clinical” classes where they watch lessons behind the glass and a university
trainer leads the discussion as the live lessons occur, much like the RRTL
will be expected to back in their home site after they are trained. Recording this would be interesting – do I
just set up the audio/video on the TL side of the glass (leaving the lesson
to happen and be picked up only peripherally?). There is so much cross talk and over talk
in these interactions. I wonder if I
could pick up on all that transpires if I just allow the TLs or trainer to
“press play” when the sessions begin.
Also, the RRTLs are teaching children every day. This is such an important part of their training….do
I record all of that for every teacher?
Seems like so much data… maybe I just need to focus on one aspect of
the training…the BTG discussion seems most important to me, in part because
it is so different than all of the PD I have engaged in. It is one of the most unique aspects of RR
training.
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Data
Management
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For
either project, the Data Management seems similar. I would need to have a way to store audio
and video files. I would want to use
ATLAS ti as much as possible since I am become more and more familiar with it
and realize how important it would be to my project. I am thinking of “skill builders” I can
work on for Digital Tools that might help me with this aspect of my
dissertation. Working with video and
maybe transcription software like Inqscribe might be good choices.
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Transcription
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For
both projects, I need to learn Jeffersonian transcription if I am going to
use DP as the lens of examination. Do
I pay a transcription service to do the first pass, generic transcriptions
and then go back and do the Jeffersonian myself? What a lot of data (for either
project)! Of course, if I am only
doing specific sections it would be more manageable… Would the criteria I use
to decide which pieces for focus on emerge as I was working on the project?
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Developing
Research Questions
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p.
21 “Rather than posing a question the focus is often on attempting to
explicate the workings of some kind of social practice that is operating in
the setting, perhaps with the ultimate aim of making broader sense of the
setting as a whole.”
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How kids develop agency in RR?
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How teacher identity shifts/changes as they
participate in TL training?
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Ask the TLs what they find difficult in their jobs
and what they were interested in (like CPO example)?
‘Themes
of interest emerged” …
“Emotion
has been theoretically interesting in discourse work.” “Emotion is often
treated as a causal variable that has a distorting effect on cognition.” –
LOTS of emotion in RR – for both students and teachers. Students who are not used to being pushed
sometimes have a hard time moving from being a passive learner to being
forced into action. Also positive
emotion too…begin to become self-reliant and confident and verbalize
this. Carol Lyon’s book on Teaching
Struggling Readers – talks about the role of emotion in learning and how we
cognitively shut down if we are scared, worried, or feel threatened. Thinking too of the challenge of RR
training for TLs. Hardest and most
beneficial learning for me personally.
Some compare it to ‘boot camp’ others to ‘running a marathon’. * small but growing literature on talk and
emotion. Thinking about how
challenging going behind the glass is.
Teachers sometimes cry.
Feels
sort of scary to just jump in and start recording not really knowing your
research questions. Really have to trust
the process and search for understanding…what is going on here, what is
important here?
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Analysis
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“Most
time consuming and most crucial…” “The process of analysis will involve
increasingly precise attempts to specify what is going on, how some practice
or practices are unfolding.”
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I guess the analysis happens over the entire time
data is collected and transcribed. If
a service does the first pass transcription, then I suppose I am just reading
and reflection (maybe writing analytic notes) about what I am noticing as I
read through the happenings. If I am
present for the teaching sessions, my notes on what I am hearing might be
useful as well.
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So, my overarching questions would be “What is
going on?” and “How is this training/teaching unfolding?” (not explicitly stated, but in general…)
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Validation
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This “turn taking” interaction happens over
and over in Reading Recovery – for both student and TL in training.
Cases
of departure – most teacher leaders make it, some don’t. Would those be the deviant cases? Or TLS that have break downs going btg…most
don’t but some do. Or people who
change their practice (most do, some don’t) would those be examples of
exceptional cases?
With
student/teachers – just looking at one teacher and child…so times when
teaching fosters initiation and times when it doesn’t. Prompts the teacher uses that bring out
some sort of initiative and prompts that stump the child (there is no
action/just inaction).
Coherence
– would need to look at other studies on PD or on teacher/child interaction
(for ‘struggling readers’. Does my
info class or compliment and why? How
does it contribute to ‘larger web of understanding?’
Readers’
evaluation – presenting snippets of the transcript to serve as examples of
the conclusion I have drawn.
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p. 40 – in many ways DP is a “classically empiricist
enterprise”? Because of concrete
recorded action and little interference by the researcher? “Its analytic approach is focused on the way
practices are built in real time and how their organization and intelligibility
is dependent on the normative organization of talk.”
- psychological issues that are relevant for
participants.
- how psychological matters are public and
intelligible.
“The key interest for discursive work is in the public
practices, how upset is displayed, understood, and receipted.” Thinking about how difficult change is – for
both children and adults. It is
emotional and challenging to change – for a child that is passive and then
expected to be active…or a teacher who has been “competent” and accomplished
with an old belief structure and is put in an environment that challenges some
of the beliefs she holds dear.
Eating
Your Words: Discursive Psychology and the Reconstruction of Eating Practices – Wiggins, Potter and Wildsmith
It
was interesting to me that the authors, at the beginning of the article,
addressed the assumptions of some of the previous research: 1) Physiological
states are accessible through quantifiable, external measures, 2) Each
measurement is taken to be an accurate representation of an internal state, and
3) Participant responses are treated as being related to, and therefore
predictors of actual eating behaviors. The authors shatter these basic assumptions
that are so widely spread and deeply held.
This made me think of standardized testing in education…that we assume
these measures are true and valid – that we can confine something as complex as
thinking or learning to a single score.
We have such a need to quantify and calculate, to encapsulate complex
processes, that we create structures on faulty foundations and
assumptions. Then, we all collectively
agree to this “Truth” and whole systems exist to support the faulty
structure.
In
the method section, I was struck by how short (in duration) the data collection
was – only 7 days. Quite bit of data was
ultimately collected – over 15 hours of conversation, but 7 days seemed so
short. If I were looking at language of
RRTLs in training session, that would yield so much more data across a
year. Would that even be
appropriate? 3 hour sessions weekly for
52 weeks = 156 hours of talk. And, that
is just looking at specific training sessions, not theory class or teaching of
students. If I looked at the interaction
between a RR student and teacher over the course of a lesson series, that would
be 50 hours of talk – 2.5 hours a week (5, thirty minute lessons) for a maximum
of 20 weeks. That might be more
appropriate for a dissertation. If I
gave the teacher the audio/video recorder, she could record the sessions and I
would not have to be present.
I
found the transcript excerpts difficult to make sense of – even with the ‘key’
in the appendix as a reference, it was difficult to play back in my head how
the conversation exchange took place. I
suppose it gets easier over time with more experience. Similarly, in Reading Recovery, teachers take
“running records” of student text reading.
There is a code/short hand for insertions, deletions, rereading, self-correction
of errors etc.
On
page 8, I underlined … “In giving reasons for eat or not eating the food, its
nature is simultaneously constructed and evaluated” because it makes me think
of ‘behind the glass’ conversation where teachers are offering potential
rationale for a teaching decision a teacher behind the glass made. The understanding becomes constructed on the
spot by those participating in the discussion.
A similar happening occurs sometimes between a student and teacher. The teacher attributes a student’s success in
solving a problem to the child’s action (“you worked that out when you reread
the sentence”) or the child offers his/her explanation for problem solving. This happens over and over in RR, as the aim
is to make the child constructive and active.
On the next page, I underlined the following, “How one describes the
food is related to how the food will then be treated, for example, whether it
will be classes as something that one should, or could eat.” I wrote the following in the margin, “How one
describes the learner is related to how the intervention will occur – whether a
decision is or is not appropriate.” These
connections between this work in DP and RR continue to pop in my head.
At
the bottom of page 9, the authors talk about how DP can used to reveal flexible
constructions of “physiological accounts”… this made me think of Marie Clay and
her assertion that RR teachers remain tentative and flexible in their thoughts
about learners and the various possibilities about how to intervene to effect
literacy achievement. I am wondering if
a close examination of the ‘talk’ would reveal flexibility or rigidity…. Kind
of like the excerpt on p. 11 where one of the participants describes the vegetables
as having a permanent sort of condition – “lovely”, “nice” etc.
I
thought about the term “eating in situ” and relayed it (or course) to RR –
which examines “teaching in situ” – not ‘retrospective accounts’ or an
‘experimental design’ – as it actually occurs.
Discursive
and scientific psychology
– Derek Edwards
I wrote this
question in the margin as I read page 426 – “How is shared understanding of
emergent literacy built and shaped though talk within Reading Recovery Teacher
Leader training sessions?” I think it is
interesting that the author was a developmental psychologist influenced by
Vygotsky and Bruner…Marie Clay was too (RR creator).
I
am reading all of this and still struggling with what discursive psychology
actually “is” and how it is connected to, but different from discourse
analysis. I feel like this article is
helping me sort it out. Allow me to type
up some quotes from the article to clarify what DP is…
DP – “provides a systematic, empirical analysis of
talk and text, principally everyday recorded talk, using a coherent set of
concepts and methods” (p. 427).
One of DP’s tasks is to “examine how psychological
concepts (memory, thought, emotion) are shaped for the functions they serve, in
and for the nexus of social practices in which we use language” (p. 427).
Again, I go back to my potential dissertation
topics….a systematic analysis of teaching interactions between a
student/teacher (or teachers) to examine
how thought or emotion are shaped within the context of literacy learning
lessons. Not quite sure I have it yet,
but thinking it all through.
I thought the discussion of the “interpretive gap”
was important. The author defines the
interpretive gap as “the distance between the object under scrutiny and via,
method, data processing, and inferences, what you eventually want to say about
it” (p. 428). The author maintains
that in DP, the “interpretive gap” is narrower in DP than in experimental
social psychology because the interpretation is grounded in the actual text
(talk) and can be immediately accessed by the reader, who doesn’t need any special
interpretive training to see the connection between the segment of “data” and
the interpretive claim about data.
Wow, you have covered a lot of ground here. Exciting stuff, to see the potential connections with Reading Recovery. Some thoughts below, I wish I could respond to everything but I'm racing against the clock to respond to everyone before class starts! :)
ReplyDelete"There has been considerable research done on RR – especially the training of teachers, but, there hasn’t been much on the “turn by turn” interactions between teacher and child or the professional development or training of Teacher Leaders (who are trained by University professionals at regional training sites and then train teachers in their school districts)."
Right - that is a great justification for doing any kind of discourse work, DP or otherwise. Actually looking at what happens, and not just what people say happens, is the key.
BTW, I am not sure Vygotsky's philosophies are congruent with DP's, in that DP is "cognitive agnostic" and does not deal with anything that is going on "in the head", so to speak. This will be something cool for us to explore, since so much of educational philosophy seemed to stop with Vygotsky...as if the discursive turn never happened. (Then again, I am not a Vygotsky expert so I could be wrong about his philosophy.) This might become clearer with the next set of readings that focus on epistemology.
"I thought it was very interesting that this article says that these issues of power and resistance are central issues to discursive psychology. They are central issues in Reading Recovery too – though perhaps not formally recognized (which might make it good for research)."
I was actually surprised to read that, because most DP work does NOT address these issues, but easily could. There is a strand of "critical discursive psychology" that Doug Canfield is pursuing in his dissertation that could or should focus more on issues of power and resistance.
"Jeffersonian transcript seems very difficult and tedious, but I am hopeful it could be very useful when looking at Reading Recovery lessons or interactions among teachers."
So, you wouldn't transcribe all of your data using Jeffersonian - just the really important parts as you are doing the analysis. It does get easier with time to read and understand the transcripts, but it is time consuming to produce for sure.
“Discursive research can be focused on the way constructions are built and stabilized, and how they are made neutral, objective, and independent of the speaker.” I am thinking that how a Reading Recovery teacher leader or teacher develops might be interesting…. Or how their ideas about struggling readers change as they go through training. The last sentence of this section fits with these topics – how kids and teachers change over time is subtle and is revealed through both their language and actions."
I can see how even trying to sort out how the idea of a "struggling reader" is constructed could be a focus. As well as what constitutes a "successful" reading recovery session. What are teachers asked to account for in their talk by the trainers, and how do they account for their choices? Lots of fertile ground here to explore.
Regarding the amount of data - more data does not equal a better research project. You can do an entire DA /DP study with just one hour of data :) It's all about the kinds of claims you are trying to make. We will talk more about this both this summer and this fall.
I want to do professional development in New Zealand! Also, coming from a long line of teachers and librarians (or media specialists or whatever the title is now) I thank you for your work with reading!
ReplyDelete-Hal