Saturday, August 31, 2013

Learning Theories Website...Suggestions

During Dr. Anfara's ADV Qual class, we came across the following website that just provided a quick overview of different paradigms and learning theories.  Do you know of any similar sites such as this that could act as a quick go to when doing our readings?  I think that it will help me if I can look at something quick like this as I come across them.  Any guidance is appreciated:-)

http://www.learning-theories.com

Keep Calm...


Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Questions for this week...

1) I am still not 100% sure what data that I will collect for the assignments.  I want to know what my dissertation area of interest is, but I am struggling.  I have a lot of ideas for work that I think need to be done in relation to current policy mandates and the effect on ESL teachers, professionally and in their identity as teachers.  I am just not sure that I want to spend that much time focusing on adults or ESL for that matter.  Struggling readers are my heart.  I really want to do something in that area that would benefit my students and the larger student body as a whole.  However, I am struggling coming up with a focus.  For this course assignment, I have been thinking about recording lunch conversations between my colleagues (getting their permission first, of course) and looking at the school discourse that comes up.  Again, I want to work with kiddos.  Would it be okay (for the purposes of this assignment) to record the conversations of kiddos during breakfast duty?  One thing that I thought of was recording a conversation between my son and his xBox friends.  There is a whole discourse happening there that reflects what we have been discussing in relation to community talk and related discourse that wouldn't necessarily be understood by someone outside of their circle.  Some of it relates to the specific game, some of it is general gaming terminology, and some of it is made up uses of already available words. What do you think about any of those random ideas?

2) For the mini-lit review, I know that I will focus on literacy and search journals related specifically to struggling readers.  I am hoping that I will find articles related to discourse analysis and the identity of these students.  Am I on the right track?

CDA:-)


The readings for this week were really good for researchers who are new to qualitative work, especially critical discourse analysis.  Each of the chapters and the article shared the theories and assumptions that backed up the work that these types of research encompass.  One of the missing elements for me in the research courses that I have taken previously is the lack of background knowledge that I personally have in working with studies of these types.  It has been very hard for me to make sense sometimes of the comparisons that my fellow classmates make between different studies that we have been reading in relation to critical race, post-structuralism, etc.  I have tried asking ‘How do I get that?’, but I never seemed to answer the question correctly. Readings, such as the readings for this week, help guide me in looking for the right person/persons tied to the different theories and what some of the theories are that I can start looking for more information on.  I am also hoping that TPTE 640 also helps guide me in this endeavor.  Any suggestions for growing in this area would be greatly appreciated.

I loved the part of the reading that tied to something shared by Hollie’s group in class last week.  ‘The meaning we attach to words is not inherent in them but as result of social conventions whereby we connect certain meanings with certain sounds (10).’ The example given in the book and I believe, in class, was the word dog. If you look up the word ‘dog’ in a dictionary, you will encounter a specific definition, but the meaning that is attached to that word is different for every individual.  That is something that those in literacy encounter a lot, especially when working with struggling readers or those with weak vocabularies.  Helping them identify the word and identify meaning in context can be difficult without background knowledge to support the learning.  It was interesting to read how this is tied to research of this type.

I really liked the fishing-net analogy.  ‘All signs in a discourse are moments.  They are the knots in the fishing-net, their meaning being fixed through their differences from one another (26).’  It tied to the meaning of the word ‘dog’ example.  If you looked up the word ‘dog’ in the dictionary, you would get a specific definition.  As you move further out from the definition, you get more varied in the meaning that is derived from the word ‘dog’.

Fairlough came up a lot in both readings and I really liked the breakdown of his approach in terms of the way it unites traditions and how it applies the concept of discourse.  Fairclough’s approach is a text-oriented form of discourse analysis that tries to unite three traditions:
1.     detailed textual analysis within the field of linguistics
2.     macro-sociological analysis of social practice
3.     micro-sociological, interpretative tradition within sociology (including ethnomethodology and conversation analysis), where everyday life is treated as the product of people’s actions in which they follow a set of shared ‘common-sense’ rules and procedures (65-66)
Fairclough applies the concept of discourse in three different ways:
1.     discourse refers to language use as social practice
2.     discourse is understood as the kind of language used within a specific field
3.     discourse is used as a count noun; referring to a way of speaking which gives meaning to experiences from a particular perspective (66-67)

I thought that the breakdown of the research design was also really helpful. ‘The research design should be tailored to match the special characteristics of the project’ (76):

1. Choice of the Research Problem (rectify injustice and inequality in society)
2. Formulation of Research Questions (starting with social practice to formulate research questions drawing on the discipline)
3. Choice of Material (depends on research questions, researcher’s knowledge of relevant material, and available access to material).
4. Transcription (decided on the basis of the research goals)
5. Analysis
a. discursive practices: focus on how the text is produced and how it is consumed
b. text: (interactional control, ethos, metaphors, wording, and grammar); transitivity-focus on how events and processes are connected with subjects and objects; modality-focus on the speaker’s degree of affinity with or affiliation to her or his statement
c. social practice: relationship between the discursive practice and its order of discourse is to be explored; aim is to map the partly non-discursive, social and cultural relations and structures that constitute the wider context of the discursive practice (81-86)
6. Results (the researcher needs to be aware that there is a risk that the results may be used as a resource in social engineering)

Rogers, R., Malancharuvil-Berkes, E., Mosley, M., Hui, D., & Joseph, G. (2005). Critical discourse analysis in education: A review of the literature. Review of Educational Research 75(3), 365- 416.

The article reading was appreciated, not only for the nice introduction that it provided me into the components of critical discourse analysis, but also because it tied specifically to research that has been done (and needs to be done) in educational settings.  ‘Education researchers turned to discourse analysis as a way to make sense of the ways in which people make meaning in educational contexts (366).’  One of the areas that I am thinking of pursuing is the professional development that is offered to ESL teachers in the realm of CCSS and the new assessment mandates.  I think that DA would provide an excellent way of looking at the discourse that these teachers use as they make meaning of these mandates.

Another element that I pulled out of the article in terms of my own possible research concerned critical discourse analysis. ‘Critical Discourse Analysis focuses on how language as a cultural tool mediates relationships of power and privilege in social interactions, institutions, and bodies of knowledge (367).’ I wondered if this could be used to look at the relationship or roles of mainstream teachers and ESL/specialist teachers.  It seems like in my school, at least, that there are power and privilege issues in relation to these two sets of teachers.  I think that it would be interesting to look at the discourse that it used in this area.

I just had to point out this quote, I think you would be disappointed in me if I didn’t…’The big question is how much of the context—beyond the here and now of the interaction—is important, or necessary, to understanding the interaction (377).’

The following was an ‘oh’ moment for me. ‘Education researchers are often researchers of familiar educational settings.  As members and ex-members of the school communities that we study, we bring with us (often successful) histories of participation in those institutions as students, teachers, and parents (382).’ This was talked about in the section discussing researcher roles and the balance needed to make sure that there was enough reflexivity applied as well as the ability to identify the everyday discourse that was spoken by participants.  Too much insight might lead to an inability to recognize the importance of the everyday since it is all seen as routine/unimportant and too little might lead to an inability in being able to recognize the everyday discourse as being relevant to the study. 

This was an area for me that I struggled with in the reading.  My struggle was more in a worry for the future for myself as a researcher than with the material itself.  ‘A real problem for education researchers who are interested in Critical Discourse Analysis is their relative lack of experience in dealing with the micro-structure of texts.  This is compounded by the relative lack of attention to SFL in the American context (384).’ How does one accomplish this experience or gain the understanding needed to deal ‘deal with the micro-structure of texts’.  Is this something that you take a linguistics course on?  Is there one offered at UT? ‘Education researchers should spend more time incorporating SFL theory and method (or comparable linguistic models) into their analysis (386).’

Along with the article’s discussion on reflexivity, the following made me think of Elizabeth’s work with Special Education meetings.  ‘What was refreshing is that researchers in education also looked closely at the language of those who suffer (students, parents in meetings, teachers) and found places of agency, creativity, and resistance.  We need to proceed cautiously with conducting research on groups of people who have been oppressed historically, as opposed to conducting research with these people (385).’  I could see where this would be an important and difficult area to work.  Every stage of the IRB process discusses the need to avoid risk and procedures are put into place that help the researcher protect the participants.  I knew that research involves students was a tricky area, but I had never thought previously as parents or teachers being oppressed.  I started thinking about it and my brain started spinning in all of the situations in which that is true.


Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Words & Minds (Mercer) Reading Notes and Thoughts


Based on my experience as an elementary ESL teacher during the NCLB and Reading First craze, the recent move to CCSS, and on the last few weeks that have been spent getting an introduction to DP, this book was especially relevant to where I am at currently in my professional development.  It was hard for me to pick out individual things to discuss, because there was a lot of great stuff in this book. I hope it sets the tone for the rest of the course reading materials.  I loved it.  Keep it on the syllabus for future course offerings.

There were several elements that seemed especially relevant to where we left things on our last night of DP, a short week ago.  One of those elements dealt with the role of accountable talk as it is being ‘mandated’ in Tennessee schools or at least heavily focused on in ELA and Math CCSS teacher trainings.  I thought some things in this reading seemed to point to how the move could have been supported as ‘research-based’.  For example, ‘Classroom research has shown that the educational potential value of collaborative activity is often squandered because students do not communicate effectively (pg. 146).’  Accountable talk instruction would seem to support the improvement of collaborative activities by teaching students how to communicate with one another.  I also tied the accountable talk portion of the CCSS trainings with the later reading on exploratory talk. 

Exploratory talk is that in which partners engage critically but constructively with each other’s ideas.  Relevant information is offered for joint consideration.  Proposals may be challenged and counter-challenged, but if so reasons are given and alternatives are offered.  Agreement is sought as a basis for joint progress.  Knowledge is made publicly accountable and reasoning is visible in the talk (pg. 153).

One thing from the reading was the idea the Talk Lessons.  If I had read that this came out of the TN CCSS training manual, I wouldn’t have been surprised.  It aligns perfectly with what TN teachers are being told to implement in their classrooms right now.  I am pretty sure that the ‘Ground Rules’ are posted throughout my school in almost every class in one manner or another and the same is true for the Talking Rules. 

We have agreed to…
-share ideas
-give reasons
-question ideas
-consider
-agree
-involve everybody
-everybody accepts responsibility

Our Talking Rules…
-We share our ideas and listen to each other.
-We talk one at a time.
-We respect each other’s opinions.
-We give reasons to explain our ideas.
-If we disagree we ask ‘why’?
-We try to agree in the end (pg. 161-162).

On our last night of DP, one of my classmates shared that she had just attended the CCSS training in her school in which they learned about CCSS.  Then, we discussed how interesting this idea was and several members of the group discussed whether or not they thought this was good teaching or practice.  When we discussed it, I had just attended the CCSS training myself that was provided by the state and then participated in a school level CCSS training in which we discussed the implementation of accountable talk.  I was on the fence.   I can see how the level of accountable talk that they were striving for would help students be better prepared for life outside the classroom and better participants in conversations in their jobs. ‘As children communicate with people around them, they are learning to perceive and understand the world from the perspective of being a member of a community (pg. 132).’ The more articulate one is the more likely that their ideas will be accepted and sought out.  At least, I think that is true for some arenas.  I also worry about the students who are in our classroom that aren’t striving to be college bound or work in ‘professional’ careers.  How are they going to be perceived in their jobs if they pull out this line of talk?

Example of Accountable Language Stems
·  “I agree with _____ because _____.”
·  “I like what _____ said because _____.”
·  “I agree with _____; but on the other hand, _____.”
Disagreement
·  “I disagree with _____ because _____.”
·  “I’m not sure I agree with what _____ said because _____.”
·  “I can see that _____; however, I disagree with (or can’t see) _____.”
Clarifications
·  “Could you please repeat that for me?”
·  Paraphrase what you heard and ask, “Could you explain a bit more, please?”
·  “I’m not sure I understood you when you said _____. Could you say more about that?”
·  “What’s your evidence?”
·  “How does that support our work/mission at _____?”
Confirmation
·  “I think _____.”
·  “I believe _____.”
Confusion
·  “I don’t understand _____.”
·  “I am confused about _____.”
Extension
·  “I was thinking about what _____ said, and I was wondering what if _____.”
·  “This makes me think _____.”
·  “I want to know more about _____.”
·  “Now I am wondering _____.”
·  “Can you tell me more about _____?”
Review
“I want to go back to what _____ said.”

As a side note, it was interesting for me to read about Community of Practice, which the author described as being ‘applied to groups which are united by common purposes and who engage in joint activity (pg. 116).’  It was interesting for me, because it is work that I have looked at heavily in relation to my work with professional development study groups that aim to increase the professional development and collaboration between the mainstream classroom teachers and myself, the ESL teacher in my school.  I believe I looked at how it was presented by Wagner and a colleague, but I have to go back and check my notes. 

The biggest and best part that came out for me in the reading, based on where we left things a week ago, dealt with context.  It was something that continues to perplex me in terms of how to understand DP and its use in research.  I think context is very important to really understanding something and it is hard for me to accept or even understand the rope of context in DP studies. I was really glad that we were going to come back to this, at least in relation to DA.  Mercer described it by saying ‘Context is not something that exists independently of people.  People have to strive to create foundations of common, contextualizing knowledge (pg. 44).’  Mercer shared how there are many definitions to what context is and shared the resources that are drawn upon to establish context, such as:
-‘the physical surroundings;
-the past shared experience and relationship of the speakers;
-the speakers’ shared tasks or goals;
-the speakers’ experience of similar kinds of conversation (pg. 44).’

Early on, Mercer shared that “‘Context’ is created anew in every interaction between a speaker and listener or writer and reader.  From this perspective, we must take account of listeners and readers as well as speakers and writers who create meanings together (pg. 21).” From a DP standpoint, is this one of the reasons why the role of the researcher or rather the reflexivity of the researcher is so important?  Even if context was ‘simply’ defined by the physical surroundings in a DP study, the researcher’s background and schema set the stage for how it is perceived and therefore how it is represented to the research audience.  Is this correct?  Is that why context is held to the same regard in DP studies as it is in other qualitative studies?  The researcher has to define what is important, because really, at the end of it all, the study comes back to who the researcher is and what the researcher is bringing to analysis of the study?

Great Quotes from the Reading That I Wish to Hold Onto…

Language is a tool for carrying out joint intellectual activity, a distinctive human inheritance designed to serve the practical and social needs of individuals and communities and which each child has to learn to use effectively (pg.1).

We all think collectively, and teamwork of this kind is vital for many kinds of activity (pg. 2).

‘Two heads are better than one’ meaning that the mental resources of two or more people working together can achieve more than the sum of their individual contributions (pg. 3).

Two heads may be better sometimes, but we also say that ‘too many cooks spoil the broth’.  That is, we find that people frequently misunderstand each other, and that joint activity can generate confusion, stifle individual creativity and achieve only mediocrity (pg. 3).

Language is…flexible, innovative, and adaptable to the demands of changing circumstances.  It enables people to create, share, and consider new ideas and to reflect together on their actions (pg. 4).

Words mean what humans agree together to make them, new words can be created as required, and they can be combined to make an infinite variety of meanings.  Language enables us to share thoughts about new experiences and organize life together in ways in which no other species can (pg. 4). 

Words can carry meanings beyond those consciously intended by speakers or writers because listeners or readers bring their own perspectives to the language they encounter (pg. 5).

In order to become effective communicators, children have to learn a particular language and understand how it is used to ‘get things done’ in their home community (pg. 5).

Each living language is therefore a cultural creation which has emerged from the history of generations of a community of users.  Unlike young honey-bees, children will only learn how to use a native language by interacting with the people around them in the context of social events (pg. 7).

We use language to transform individual thought into collective thought and action (pg. 8).

Vygotsky’s 2 functions of language:
1.  Cultural Tool:  use it for sharing and jointly developing the knowledge which enables organized human social life to exist and continue
Psychological Tool:  use it for organizing our individual thoughts, for reasoning, planning and reviewing our actions (pg. 10)

Michael Halliday:  ‘When children learn language…they are learning the foundation of learning itself.’ (pg. 11)

It is that language provides us with a means for thinking together, for jointly creating knowledge and understanding (pg. 15).

Shared Knowledge formed part of the context-the contextual foundation- that they (colleagues in a workplace) created for their talk (pg. 19).

Some researchers define ‘context’ in terms of the physical environment in which language is used, but that only provides some potential resources for our context-making (pg. 19).

I feel that we have to accept that ‘context’ is a mental phenomenon and that it consists of whatever information listeners (or readers) use to make sense of what is said (or written). (pg. 20)

Conversations run on contextual tracks made of common knowledge (pg. 21).

Exophoric reference-employing words like ‘that’ and ‘there’ to refer to things which exist in the physical context of the talk.  Exophoric reference is a kind of linguistic ‘pointing’ (pg. 23).

By ‘conversational ground rules’ I mean the conventions which language users employ to carry on particular kinds of conversations.  Conversational ground rules are part of the context of any conversation.  They consist of the knowledge, which may not be made explicit by speakers, about how to do certain kinds of talking (pg. 28).

Cumulative talk is based on ground rules which encourage joint, additive contributions to the talk and relatively uncritical acceptance of what partners say (pg. 33).

We often only recognize ground rules exist when someone breaks them (pg. 39).

Attempts to build context from shared history can be done well, or badly; they may or may not succeed (pg. 47). –Side note, this reminded me of a scene from the movie Dangerous Minds. It was a perfect example of characters with a shared interested from a shared profession not succeeding in an exchange. When the characters are discussing the poet ‘Dylan’ and one of them is discussing Bob Dylan and the other is discussing Dylan Thomas, but both think they are discussing the same guy.  Neither of them could have been more clear in what they were saying, but their individual viewpoints were just that, individual. 

Collective remembering is a very common, everyday kind of joint thinking. Interacting with our friends, family and colleagues, we frequently use the resource of each other’s memories to clarify past events, check our personal evaluations of them, and recall how to perform skilled operations (pg. 49).

Teaching techniques for building the future from the past…
-recap: brief review of things that happened earlier in the previous joint experience of the class
-elicitations: usually in the form of a question; an attempt by a teacher to obtain from students information gained in past classroom activity
-repetitions: repeat student’s answer in an affirming, conclusive way, holding the answer up, so to speak, for all the class to see
-reformulations:  paraphrase the student response
-exhortations:  having students think or remember(pg. 53-55)

Children need to be enabled to become active users of the tool of language, and this means giving them opportunities for practice in less didactic kinds of conversations (pg. 56).

Everyday conversations involve:
-referring back to shared experiences
-eliciting information
-offering information
-justifying ideas and proposals
-evaluating other people’s contributions
-repeating and reformulating each other’s statements (pg. 56)

Techniques effective orators use:
-3 part list
-contrast with seemingly conflicting statements
-call and response
-metaphors and similes
-reported speech

Disputational talk is characterized by an unwillingness to take on the other person’s point of view and the consistent reassertion of one’s own (pg. 97).

Exploratory talk is that in which partners engage critically but constructively with each other’s ideas (pg. 98).

How Communities Enable Collective Thinking
-a history
-a collective identity
-reciprocal obligations
-a discourse (pg. 106)

Fluency in the discourse is likely to be one of the obvious signs of membership (pg. 107).

Language can be used by them to simulate social life, to create virtual contexts in which they can use dramatized activity to think together about the ways in which life is carried out in the communities in which they are cultural apprentices (pg. 144).

Thursday, August 15, 2013

Introduction...

Hello everybody.  I am so excited that I am getting to take this course with you.  I recognize a lot of the names for the students in the course and I look forward to meeting the new people that I haven't met yet.  I know it is going to be a GREAT semester.  I cannot wait to learn from you.

For those who don't know me, my name is Christy Evans.  I am a first year doctoral student (YEAH!) in Literacy Studies.  I am a wife and mother, but my guys are a source of comfort and support.  I am a full-time K-4 ESL teacher at Alcoa Elementary School and a full-time student at UT in the evenings.  I made several ambitious New Year's Resolutions this year that I am struggling to keep up with, such as becoming a fitness role model for my students.  Since January 1, I have lost 27 lbs. and have been trying different fitness routines (Color Me Rad 5Ks, P90X, and T25).  I am also trying to learn Spanish and pick a research interest to help focus my work. Any suggestions will be greatly appreciated.

As for areas of research interest, I have a couple of areas that I am considering trying to explore further.  I am interested in the professional development that is offered to ESL teachers in the current educational climate in TN, ESL parents as partners in their child's reading education, and the identity that elementary ESL students have in English only schools.  A lot of my professional goals and educational goals are tied to developing relationships with parents, so I really need to learn Spanish:-)

I am interested in this course for several reasons.  I love the work of qualitative researchers.  I am not a numbers person.  I know that there is some value in knowing how many people felt this or that or how many times an event was evident.  However, I think too often numbers are used by researchers as a smoke screen.  For someone who isn't educated in an area, it can be comforting and/or overwhelming to try and wade through a lot of numerical data.  Researchers can use this to their advantage to not really portray a real issue, because they know people aren't going to do the work required to understand what is really happening in the data presented.  Also, qualitative researchers are able to have a connection with their research that numbers cannot facilitate. However, the real reason that I am taking this course is that it was recommended by the members of my digital tools course a few springs ago.  As an ESL teacher, language is a big part of what I do.