Lester
and Paulus – Accountability in public displays of knowing in an undergraduate
computer-mediated communication context
I
thought this article was interesting for a number of different reasons. One, I have the students in my reading 430
class write reading reflections prior to each class. These reflections have a very similar prompt. I have asked them to share their reactions,
beliefs, or experiences related to the topic.
I have found that they tend to write summary statements in academic
prose instead of responding to the prompt.
I write back to each one of them, and I intentionally comment on the
aspects of their writing that connect to the prompt. It seems that over time, with this type of
interaction and with me continuing to describe my expectations of the posts in class
that the students begin to summarize less and connect more in the way I
requested. It would be very interesting
to look at those posts and see if that is truly happening. Talking about change again…. It would also be
very interesting to see if similar script formulations, vague comments, and “I don’t
know comments come up”. Secondly, I
found this interesting in thinking about RR training. One of the things that makes it so challenging
is that teachers do have to make their understandings public. We discuss a great deal – both theory and
practice as we watch behind the glass lessons. Teachers make statements about
knowledge and are challenged to support them – even when they are novice in the
intervention and haven’t much reading of theory or teaching of children under
their belts (so to speak). The
concluding comments of the article made me consider this – the vulnerability of
making your knowledge public.
In
the article, you mentioned that you had only analyzed the blog posts and were
using the other data in other projects.
What are those other projects?
I
am also wondering why so few (2) extracts were included and discussed. Was it due to limitations of/from the journal? I thought those included were very
demonstrative of a number of rhetorical devices, but was shocked when I read the
Conclusion heading. I was anticipating
that more extracts would be discussed.
Varga
& Paulus – Grieving online: Newcomers’ constructions of grief in an online
support group
Reading
these articles has made me think about how I might want to investigate written
talk … instead of naturally occurring talk.
There is a current debate in RR land right now. Many trainers want to use more technology in
the training and they are getting lots of push back from other trainers who don’t
want to change the training model because it has been successful. I remember doing gobs of reading on reading
theory in training and then discussing those readings in small groups and in
relation to live lessons. I wonder how
blogging prior to class could have contributed to my understanding…and I wonder
if that is an experience that could be explored using discursive psychology. Prior to reading these two articles, I hadn’t
considered anything but naturally occurring talk. But, now I am wondering if there is a
different and equally interesting direction to take.
I
thought the paragraph explaining why you didn’t need approval or permission to
have access to the data was important and interesting. We’ve been talking about that so much in DT,
it was nice to see an actual study addressing those issues.
In
the conclusion, when you are talking about future research, you talk about the
experiences of lurkers in on-line grief forums and the possibility of doing
more research on them. Because they are
lurkers…whose presence is somewhat invisible, how would you get access to them? How would you go about investigating their
experiences? Seems like an interesting
idea, but I was unsure how you would find them!
Canfield
– Dissertation proposal: The discursive construction of language learning in multiuser
virtual environments
This
proposal was the most difficult of the three (Price, Johnston, Canfield) for me
to understand. I am not sure if it was
the writing style, or the content, or the fact that I am reading it last on a
late Friday afternoon…
I
thought his definition of “research” was really interesting – “Research is in
essence an exercise in (re)presenting reality (Potter, 1996) by producing constructions
from a particular position. This
axiological stance turns away from foundationalist values of ‘validity, reliability,
rules of evidence, and decision criteria’.
I believe that as I am actively engaged in the fabrication of the claims
of this study, I can only offer one of a plethora of potential stances (Potter
& Wetherell, 1987)”. He goes on to
say that “… all researchers, myself included, fundamentally traffic in versions
of the world that are grounded in their own epistemic and ontological views
(Edwards, 1997a, p.45). I agree with much of what he said, but it read
pretty radical!
Canfield
talks about interpretive repertoires, ideological dilemmas and subject positions
(which I read/wrote about in my 1st article critique) as tools
within critical discursive psychology.
Those are not ONLY in CDP, correct? My article was not concerned with “critical”
discursive psychology, but addressed those concepts.
I
thought he really spelled out his search process, his process of analysis and
was most specific about how many related dissertations, articles, text etc.
that he found as a result of his searching. He didn’t mention using a research
journal or interacting with others as part of his study. I am assuming that he didn’t engage in those
aspects, or he would have mentioned them.
I
hope when he comes on Monday, that he will talk about how he includes artifacts
in the environment as part of his “discourse”.
I wasn’t very clear on that.
Good questions - this one I'll just answer here in case we don't get to it tonight: "In the conclusion, when you are talking about future research, you talk about the experiences of lurkers in on-line grief forums and the possibility of doing more research on them. Because they are lurkers…whose presence is somewhat invisible, how would you get access to them? How would you go about investigating their experiences? Seems like an interesting idea, but I was unsure how you would find them!" Exactly. This came from one of the reviewers who wanted us to address "lurkers". That was the best we could come up with. Ha ha.
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