Gee: How to Do Discourse Analysis
Humans are creatures
of language (3).
Languages change all
the time (4).
Unit 1: Language and
Context
As an ESL teacher, I really enjoyed this reading. I think that for anyone working with language
either with learners or research that this is a nice book to help you
understand how we use language and what we do with it. I think that its important for people to
understand the dialects that people have and they manners that they construct
their identities. I will also admit that
it is like what you have talked about before in class. I am one of those people that like to have a
plan and I like ‘instructional’ manuals.
As you will see later in my blog, a portion of the reading gave me a
little bit of a heart attack. I’m not
even going to lie. There was also a
point in the reading that I thought, ‘Trena has been keeping this from me all
along, so that I would have to come to this discovery on my own.’ You’ll see what I mean later.
‘We discourse analysts have to learn to make what we take
for granted new and strange. This is why it is sometimes good, when doing
discourse analysis, for an insider and outsider to study the same data together
(19).’ Gee later goes onto explain that ‘The outsider can help the insider see
old things as new and strange again. The
insider can help the outsider use context more deeply to correct judgments
about meaning and purposes being pursued (20).’
In class, you have talked about DART and Elizabeth discussed how it has
helped her in the analysis of her data.
Is this the role of DART? Is it
helping researchers in a manner similar to ‘The Frame Problem’, which is ‘a way
to keep us honest (37).’
An element that I found interesting was the brief discussion
on ASL. ‘American Sign Language counts
as “oral language,” even though it is signed, since it is acquired as a native
language by some children and used for face-to-face communication (4).’ I understand why Gee says this and I am sure
that there is basis for it. I know that
it is it’s own language and it provides a means of communication for those
using it. I just have a hard time
counting it has oral language.
As you know me increasingly well at this point, context is
important to me. During the summer, I
struggled to understand the role of context in DP studies, but as we have went
through this semester I am starting to see how DA addresses context or how it
is important in qualitative studies:
Context includes the physical setting
in which the communication takes place and everything in it; the bodies, eye
gaze, gestures, and movements of those present; what have previously been said
and done by those involved in the communication; any shared knowledge those
involved have, including shared cultural knowledge (5).
‘There
is always the possibility of considering other and additional aspects of the
contexts, and these new considerations may change how we interpret the
utterance (31).’ Did you know this all
along and have been holding back from me so I could learn this aspect from Gee?
For me, context is very important and
adds so much to the information that is studied concerning the interactions
that people have. I know you have
pointed out before that there are so many everyday interactions that people
have in which we don’t have all of the context that we could have, like body
language, gestures, etc., such as telephone conversations and yet we somehow
manage to understand those we are having a conversation with. I guess I have just been worrying that when
you are trying to study the everyday language or conversations and interactions
that people have that it would be very misleading to think you know something
about what they are doing with their language if you don’t have a really
detailed understanding of the context.
But, then here was the answer.
‘We will always be willing to push context a bit further
than we would in everyday life to see if we can falsify our claims about
meaning (32).’ Another concern that I
have, however, is how is this accomplished with audio recordings. Is it accomplished by continuing to study
multiple sessions, multiple encounters, multiple conversations?
Absolutely loved this example along with the following
equation. ‘Communication and culture are
like icebergs. Only a small “tip” is
stated overtly. A vast amount lies under
the surface, not said, but assumed to be known or inferable from the context in
which the communication is occurring (8).’
WHAT THE SPEAKER SAYS
+ CONTEXT = WHAT THE SPEAKER MEANS (11)
‘We can never be completely sure of people’s intentions and
purposes. There is much that goes on in
people’s minds that is unconscious(13). ‘ I think this is where the example of
Sara and Karen’s project really hits home for me and ties together the idea of
insider/outsider, shared culture, and taken for granted information. If you are apart of the group, it is easy to
understand things that are being said, but not said if you know the context
that it is being said in. If you have a
shared culture and are an insider, you have knowledge that helps you understand
what is not being said. If you are an
outsider, you can help identify elements of taken for granted information that
is occurring that you don’t understand and can help the insider see those moments.
This is quite the most terrifying thing that I have ever
read in one of your classes. ‘We seek to
make a claim and then see if we or others can falsify it. If it is falsified, we learn something. The field, as a whole, moves forward. We look
to our colleagues to help us by trying to falsify our claims (29).’ Oh my gosh.
Don’t get me wrong. I have
learned more from the mistakes in my life than I have learned from instances
being right. As a novice researcher,
everything that I do feels wrong and feels off track. However, Gee is saying that we need to shoot
for manners in which we can be questioned and refine what we have done. I feel as if I am always wrong. I feel as if
you are always going to be able to falsify my claims unless I stick to the
known. But then, how am I going to grow as a researcher if I do that?
Unit 2: Saying, Doing, and Designing
Anything we say
performs some sort of action (44).
Each way of combining
words has a meaning (50).
I think that this points to the manipulation element of
human discourse that we have discussed before.
‘In our everyday lives, even when we are conveying information to
someone, we are also trying to do other things as well. Not only do we use language to do many
things, but any one utterance is often meant simultaneously to carry out more
than one action (42).’ I guess I am
still having a hard time with this, because so much of what we say is
unconscious. We don’t think about
it. We say it. It is why we get in trouble so much with our
speech. We respond. The grammar aspect of unit to helped me to
see the basic elements of what we are doing with our language. We use a noun and verb together to convey a
thought. We select the subject and
object of our sentence and thus something has been done with our language. Again, are we, as researchers, saying that
our participants accomplished this or that with their language even though we
don’t actually know if this was their intent.
‘It is always useful to ask of any communication: What is the speaker
trying to DO and not just what is the speaker trying to SAY (42)?’ How do you ever know that what you think the
speaker is trying to do is what they are trying to? I do think that I have a pretty good example
of this though. When I was sixteen, I
got my first car and it was back in the day of cheap gas. We had absolutely nothing to do, so we would
cruise town. I had a little Ford
Escort. One night while riding around
with my best friend she made the following comment, ‘This car sure has a great
heater.’ I responded with a side ways smile and scrunched forehead something
like, ‘Ugh, yeah. I guess.’ A few
minutes later, my best friend started pushing random buttons and ripping off
layers of clothes. She was burning
up. Instead of asking to turn the heater
off, she made a comment that I totally missed the point of. Almost 20 years later, I am still like, ‘Why
didn’t she just ask to turn off the heater?’
‘Each design choice you make about building language
structures determines certain aspects of what you mean; we have already seen
that some meaning is determined, not by what you say, but by the context in
which you say it. (51).’ For this, Gee gave the example of using the terms beef
vs. cow and how one implies and object and the other implies a living
being. This made me think of our discussions
in DP about how the media chooses to refer to things and how most of the time
they can be traced to the agenda of the network. I think that it would be interesting to look
at just the headlines right now that pertain to the government shutdown and
whether there seems to be a slant this or that way depending on which network
was covering the story.
The Why This Way and Not That Way Tool tells us always to
ask why something was said the way it was and not some other way. One way to operate with this tool is to ask
yourself the ways in which any data you are analyzing could have been said
differently. Then ask why it was said
the way it was and not the other ways (62).
‘The picture you form in your mind is determined, as we
know, not just by what was said, but by the context in which it was said (72).’
I know that this is specifically tied to research from Gee’s perspective and
the language that individuals use. This
was interesting and for me it can be tied to the education reform right now
that involves students working to provide ‘text-based’ evidence and not bring
in their own background knowledge, but how can we possibly expect students to
do this. Who we are determines what language does in our interactions. All
language has an action and context matters. I would think background knowledge
would be a huge piece of the ‘context’.
Random Notes of Interest for Me
Each person learns a certain variety—called a “dialect”—of
their native language, the variety their ancestors have passed down to them
(2). Dialects can vary in terms of vocabulary, syntax, and pronunciation (2).
Dialects can vary by region, social class, and by cultural group (2).
To do discourse analysis on our own languages in our own
culture requires a special skill. We
have to make things new and strange that we usually see as completely “normal”
and “natural” (6).
In order to do things with language, including informing, we
use grammar to build and design structures and meanings (48).
Using language is all about making choices about what and
how to build (design choices) so that we can mean what we want to mean (52).
Tier 1-3 words (53) huge concept in education that keeps
getting played around with in how the concept is labeled, but with each reform
it ends up being the same thing with a different name.
Whenever we speak or write, we always and simultaneously
build one of seven things or seven areas of “reality”:
- Significance
- Activities
- Identities
- Relationships
- Politics (distribution of goods)
- Connections
- Sign Systems and Knowledge (88-91)
"Did you know this all along and have been holding back from me so I could learn this aspect from Gee? " Um, no, I have been telling you this all along - most likely you were just not ready to hear it...? It's not that context is not important - it's that figuring out which parts of the context matter is the real challenge.
ReplyDelete" I guess I am still having a hard time with this, because so much of what we say is unconscious. We don’t think about it. We say it. It is why we get in trouble so much with our speech." Right. But just because we don't think about it consciously doesn't mean our choices aren't DOING something. They are. The whole point of this kind of research is to make those choices and consequences VISIBLE so that we can be AWARE of them. That's why it's a valuable methodology.
"Another concern that I have, however, is how is this accomplished with audio recordings. Is it accomplished by continuing to study multiple sessions, multiple encounters, multiple conversations?" Yes - but the main point is that research is NEVER DONE and NEVER "TRUE". As soon as you add more data, more encounters, more conversations, your "findings" may well change. That's just how it is.
Hence, " I feel as if I am always wrong. I feel as if you are always going to be able to falsify my claims unless I stick to the known. But then, how am I going to grow as a researcher if I do that?" Yes. We are always wrong, because we are limited human beings, but we are also always right, because we are making interpretations grounded in our best work.
"I think that it would be interesting to look at just the headlines right now that pertain to the government shutdown and whether there seems to be a slant this or that way depending on which network was covering the story." Yes, of course there is. That's why we have NPR on one side and FOX NEWS on the other : )