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From participation to contribution:
Learning, teaching and researching
in a collaborative classroom
Judith MacCallum and
Veronica Morcom
Murdoch University
EARLI Conference Limassol 25-29 August 2015
Overview
•
Context of the study – year 3 classroom
•
Sociocultural perspective
•
Classroom participation research
•
Brief methodology and data sources
•
Participation and communication patterns over a
school year
•
Changing participatory roles
•
Discussion
Research context - Year 3
classroom
•
Democratic classroom with students participating
in decisions for action, with direction offered by
cultural and social values
•
Teacher’s practice not privileged in the school
•
School is situated in middle class urban area
•
Social practices included
• class agreements
• daily social circle
• Y charts – looks like, sounds like, feels like
• weekly class meetings
• Tribes with child selected leaders and vice leaders
Daily social circle
Sociocultural perspective
•
The learner is constituted by cultural and
historical processes, embedded within cultural
activities in communities which provide the tools
for making sense of the world
•
It is usually understood that these tools are
appropriated in social interactions, providing the
means to maintain and transform those
communities (Rogoff, 2003)
•
Teacher channels a student’s activities in certain
ways so that development is organised in a
particular direction–canalization (Valsiner, 1997)
Aim of this study
•
To examine student participatory roles in class
meetings over a school year
•
To examine ways in which students change their
participatory roles, what supports and
constraints these roles
Participation in communities
•
Legitimate peripheral participation to mature
participation – individuals (Lave & Wenger,
1991; Rogoff, 2003)
•
Social construction of participatory roles in
primary school classroom (Kovalainen &
Kumpulainen, 2007) – identified different and
relatively stable modes of student participation
with differing teacher participation
•
•
•
•
Vocal participants
Responsive participants
Bilateral participants
Silent participants
Different participatory roles
Based on
•Amount of participation – number of coded
interaction pieces
•Discourse moves – initiating responding, follow-up,
responding
•Interaction sequences – SIM, SIM/T, TIM, TIB
•Communicative functions – EVI, INFO, VIEW, EVA,
CON, ORC, DEF, NEU
•Nature of teacher participation – providing
structural support, analytic support, social support,
encouraging
Communication and interaction
patterns (Kovalainen & Kumpulainen, 2007)
Interaction sequences (8) – e.g. teacher TI or student
initiated SI, bilateral TIB/SIB or multilateral TIM/SIM,
with (SIM/T) or without teacher participation
Communicative functions (10) –e.g. asking for and
providing evidence, reasons (EVI); asking for and
sharing experiences, feelings (EXP); orchestrating
the discussion (ORC); elaborations (DEF); views,
opinions, perspectives (VIEW); confirm,
acknowledge (CON); non-verbal (N-VERB);
evaluate, correct (EVA)
Method and data sources
•
Year long ethnographic study in Year 3
classroom with teacher/researcher and 24/25
students aged 9
•
Researcher spent about 1 day per week in the
classroom
•
Multiple data sources, including observation,
videoing class meetings and other activities,
reflection logs (teacher/researcher, researcher,
students), sociometric surveys, interviews with
students and parents (with photo stimulated
recall)
Range of participatory
opportunities
Our research focus - more about social practices
than academic subject concepts
•Social circle – student solo initiation SI
•Class meeting – TIM, TIB, SIM/T, SIB/T, SIM, SIB
•Tribes leader and Vice leader – SIM, SIB
•Tribes members – SIM, SIB
•Philosophy lesson – TIM, TIB, SIM/T, SIB/T, SIM,
SIB
•Think Pair Share – SIB, SIB/T
Data for this analysis
•
Video of class meetings over the school year
(23) – approximately 30 minutes each. Students
could ‘put up’ an item they wished class to
discuss
•
More detailed analysis of four class meetings –
beginning term 1, early term 3, term 4 and end
term 4
•
Teacher reflections log, student reflections, and
researcher field notes
Analysis
•
Class meeting student items over the year –
number of individual and pair items
•
Number, and which students initiate items
•
Interaction sequences and communicative
functions
•
Patterns of interaction sequences and
participatory roles of students
•
Support roles by teacher and students
•
Changes in patterns and roles over the year
Number of student items over year
Mean No. of Student Items per Class
Meeting
4.5
4
3.5
3
2.5
Individual
2
Pair
1.5
1
0.5
0
Term 1
Term 2
Term 3
School Term over Year
Term 4
Number of students with item
20
18
Number of Students initiating an Item
18
17
16
16
14
12
10
9
8
6
4
2
0
Term 1
Term 2
Term 3
Terms over the School Year
Number of students
Term 4
First class meeting
Communication patterns
•
Class meeting, first week of term 1, 2/02/2007
•
Three teacher items – addressed first, with teacher
encouraging participation from class and individuals - TIM,
TIB sequences
•
Three student items – in order of placement on the
whiteboard. These three students participated as vocal
participants SIB/T, SIM/T
•
Other students participated in mainly bilateral interactions
initiated by the three students or the teacher
•
Teacher provides structural, analytic, social support
•
Participatory roles similar to (Kovalainen & Kumpulainen,
2007)
Teacher Item
TIM
Teacher Initiated sequence at beginning to all Ss
TI First of all I want to talk about instructions
[Talks about something that
happened at end of previous day]
INFO
EXP
INFO
TF What do you think that means for your desk?
VIEW
SR [Hands go up]
N-VERB
SIB/T Student Initiated sequence with T
S1I [Hand up ready to provide explanation]
N-VERB
TR What do you think S1?
VIEW
S1R [explains ]
INFO
TF Mm
CON
First student item
TF: Where’s S2?
S2: [moves to front of class]
ORC
N-VERB
TIB TI: S2 you put down a really important item
EVA
S2, I want you to explain to the class what this means to you EVI
TIM
TI: I want you to listen very carefully
because you might have some really good ideas too
SIM/T
S2: [explains to class]
ACT
EVI
INFO EVI
S2: [looks to teacher]
N-VERB
TR: [nods]
N-VERB
S2: [continues speaking]
TR: That sounds like a really good idea, S2
EXP INFO
EVA
TF: Does anyone have any questions that they would like to ask S2?
VIEW
S2: [points to S3]
ORC
S3: [asks more about S2’s experience]
EXP
TF: What kind of activities are they S2?
DEF
Class meeting 17
Class meeting 17, 10/08/2007
•
Three teacher items. Four student items (2 individual, 2
pairs)
•
Students voted as to which items would be discussed first
•
Teacher wrote down discussion points on another board
•
SIM, SIB and SIM/T sequences
•
Students’ communicative functions recounts of experience
and feelings (EXP), observations (INFO), views and
opinions (VIEW), reasons for view (EVI), clarification (DEF)
•
Teacher’s communication functions predominately
orchestrating (ORC) and acknowledging (CON), later asked
‘are these stories or solutions?’ (EVA), asked for solutions
(ACT) - structuring, social support and reflective
Class meeting 22, 2/11/2007
•
No teacher items. 4 student items (2 individual, 3 pairs, 1
trio)
•
Students voted as to which items would be discussed first
•
Teacher wrote down discussion points on another board
•
SIM, SIB mainly, and few SIM/T sequences
•
Students’ communicative functions recounts of experience
and feelings (EXP), observations (INFO), views and
opinions (VIEW), reasons for view (EVI), recounts of
action, requests for solutions (ACT), evaluation (EVA),
some orchestration (ORC)
•
Teacher’s communicative functions predominately
orchestrating (ORC) and acknowledging (CON)
•
Some students taking supportive role of teacher
Last class meeting
Class meeting 23 6/12/2007
•
No teacher items and five student items (3 individual, 2
pairs)
•
Teacher asks if anyone wants to take teacher role – almost
all hands go up, and negotiation with class as to how to
decide. Several students without an item on board took
turns as Teacher. None were initially Vocal participants
•
Teacher takes a position at the blackboard out of mat area,
but intervenes to remind students to be respectful then,
‘Let’s try again’ (ORC) – mainly social support to group
rather than individuals
•
SIM and SIB sequences
•
Student T support participation (ORC) and provide ideas
(INFO), rather than to ask for ideas (INFO) opinions (VIEW)
Changing participatory roles
•
A was Vocal participant, put up 6 individual items and 6
pair items over year, was Leader (Tr 2) Vice Leader (Tr 4 &
5), observed as an encourager and supportive of other
students’ participation over the year (social mainly)
•
E was initially a Silent participant, waited to be asked to
participate, put up individual item in term 2 when Leader
(Tr 2), pair item in term 3 with A, SIM sequences in Tr,
more like Responsive/Bilateral participant in class
meetings
•
C was initially a Bilateral participant, initiated bilateral
communication, put up 1 individual item in term 1, 2 pair
items term 2 & 3, Vice Leader with A (Tr 2), Leader (Tr 4),
acted as Student T in last class meeting, beginning to
initiate and support multilateral communications
Reflective activity 3/12/2007
Roles people play in groups
•A (vice leader at the time) Vocal participant I’m an
encourager and give ideas. I am a kind person and an
organiser person. I am willing to try out to be a helper.
•E Silent to Bilateral ? I’m an encourager and I help people
that are lost on what to do. I am willing to try out to be an
ideas person for my group.
•C Bilateral to ? I am the idea and peacekeeper. I would like
to play an encourager or an organiser. I am willing to try a
new role if I don’t get in trouble from it.
Summary
•
Over the year the classroom practices provided opportunities for
students to engage in a range of communicative sequences
•
Class meetings provided the teacher with the opportunity to
model a range of communicative functions (asking for, and
sharing), nature of support changed over year, included social,
analytic and reflective
•
Students mainly orchestrated discussion (ORC), shared ideas
(INFO), opinions (VIEW), feelings and experiences (EXP), offered
evidence (EVI) or clarification (DEF) and evaluated feedback
(EVA). Later in the year students offered solutions or solutions
they had tried. A smaller number of students asked for other
students’ opinions, experiences or solutions, whether in bilateral
or multilateral sequences
•
Needed ACT for request action or offer solution, also a reflective
level of thinking introduced
Changing participatory roles
•
Some students changed participatory roles
- Class meetings provided opportunity for
students to initiate multilateral sequences
- Items with student pairs offered opportunity
for a different range of participatory roles
- Tribes provided further opportunity for
students to initiate multilateral sequences and
support each other
•
Another kind of participant role emerged –
Responsive/Bilateral - transitioning to Vocal?
Conclusion
•
Stetsenko (2008) argues that learning is
“contributing to collaborative practices” – not
just participation
•
If students are to change participatory roles over
a year they need opportunities to contribute
rather than participate
References
•
Kovalainen, M., & Kumpulainen, K. (2007). The social construction of
participation in an elementary classroom community. International
Journal of Educational Research, 46, 141-158.
•
Lave, J., & Wenger, E. (1991). Situated learning: Legitimate peripheral
participation. New York: Cambridge University Press.
•
Rogoff, B. (2003). The cultural nature of human development. New York:
Oxford University Press.
•
Stetsenko, A. (2008). From relational ontology to transformative activist
stance on development and learning: Expanding Vygotsky’s (CHAT)
project. Cultural Studies in Science Education, 3, 471-491.
•
Valsiner, J. (1997). Culture and the development of children’s actions: A
theory of human development (2nd ed.). New York: John Wiley & Sons.
Thank you
Comments? Questions?
jamac@murdoch.edu.au
Veronica.morcom@education.wa.edu.au
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