DOCUMENT RESUME ED 371 306 CS 011 735 AUTHOR Collins, James L. TITLE Dialogue and Resistance in Small-Group Reading-Writing Inst

DOCUMENT RESUME ED 371 306 CS 011 735 AUTHOR Collins, James L. TITLE Dialogue and Resistance in Small-Group Reading-Writing Inst

DOCUMENT RESUME ED 371 306 CS 011 735 AUTHOR Collins, James L. TITLE Dialogue and Resistance in Small-Group Reading-Writing Instruction. PUB DATE Apr 94 NOTE 109p.; Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (New Orleans, LA, April 4-8, 1994). PUB TYPE Speeches/Conference Papers (150) -- Reports Research/Technical (143) EARS PRICE MF01/PC05 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Classroom Communication; Discourse Analysis; *Discussion (Teaching Technique); Grade 6; Intermediate Grades; Middle Schools; Public Schools; Reading Instruction; Reading Research; *Resistance (Psychology); *Small Group Instruction; *Student Reaction; Urban Education; Writing Instruction IDENTIFIERS *Communication Behavior; Communication Context; Small Group Communication ABSTRACT A study examined a resistant student's interactive discursive practices within a participant framework. Data were taken from observations, audiotapes, and transcripts of teacher-led small group discussions in two sixth-grade classrooms at a public urban middle school. Seven visiting teachers from a university and 56 students in the two classes worked in groups consisting of one teacher and four students. The groups were asked to discuss and write in response to a series of tasks focusing on readings about people. The audiotape and transcript used to illustrate the role of the resistant student recorded a lesson from the first day of study of a 670-word excerpt from "The Acorn People." Results indicated that "resistant" students may be sufficiently competent in classroom discourse to participate meaningfully in the dialogue but choose to participate intermittently. The particular student was interested less in taking part in the discussion than in taking it apart, preferring to move in and out of the lesson, sometimes contributing to the lesson but more often opposing it. (Contains 22 references, 5 notes, and 12 figures presenting segments of the transcript. The excerpt from "The Acorn People," a transcription guide, and the complete transcript of the discussion of "The Acorn People" are attached.)(RS) *********************************************************************** * Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made * * from the original document. * *********************************************************************** Dialogue and Resistance in Small-Group Reading-WritingInstruction Paper presented at the Annual Meetingof the American Educational Research Association, New Orleans, April4, 1994 James L. Collins State University of New York atBuffalo U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION "PERMISSION TO REPRODUCE THIS Office of Educational Research and Improvement MATERIAL HAS BEEN GRANTED BY EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES INFORMATION N hTaEsR documeCnEt reproduced as received trom the person or organizahon originating 11 C Minor changes have been made to improve reprocknon Quality Points of view or opimons stated in this docu. TO THE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES ment do nOt necessarily represent official OERI position or policy Introduction INFORMATION CENTER (ERIC)." My focus in this paper is on the"uncooperative" participant in classroom discourse. The uncooperativestudent has often been described as not exercisingsufficient communicative competence, as"not knowing the 'rules of the game' -- thestandard ways -- of communicating inthe classroom' (Wilkinson, 1982, p. 5). Thislack of familiarity with academic language, in turn, may be seen as partof a larger problem of incongruence between the language of home andschool (as in Heath, 1983; Delpit, 1986, 1988; Gee, 1990). This study questionsthe assumption of underused or underdeveloped communicative competenceand its connection to uncooperative participation in classroomdiscourse by suggesting that, at least in some classroom contexts,the uncooperative student maysuffer less \-4 from not knowing the rules of theclassroom communication gamethan from resisting the enactment of that game. I am using resistance in the senseof challenging authority, both the authority of the teacher and ofreified knowledge (Everhart, 1983). 2 Resistance thus means oppositionalbehavior1 and takes two principalforms in the teacher-led small groupliteracy lessons which provide thedata in the study. It shows up most frequentlyin brief comments when theresistant participant plays a different rolefrom the one assigned by theclassroom communication game, and it shows upin more extended comments where the resistance begins to take onthe character of a differentconversational game. Contrary tothe conventional view whereresistance is seen as isolated from the primary classroomlanguage socialization process, the data in this study suggest thatresistance depends on dialoguewhich is part of the primary classroom languagesocialization process. Like compliance, resistance is initiated and sustainedthrough interactive language processes. In place of the metaphor of gameplaying, Cazden (1988) compares classroom discourse to enacted drama: Whereas utterances are psychologicalphenomena produced by a single person, speech events such aslessons are social events accomplished by the collaborativework of two or more people.In metaphorical terms, "school" is always aperformance that must be constituted through the participationof a group of actors. But only one of them --the teacher -- knows (or thinksshe knows) how it is supposed to be played, and soshe assumes the dual roles of stage director and principal actor.She is the only native speakerin the classroom culture; yet she has todepend on her "immigrant" students for help in enacting a culturallydefined activity. (p. 44) What the metaphors of game andperformance have in common is the fact that both are constructed orscripted activities, fictions complete with plots, settings andcharacters. Enacting the performancedepends on 3 collaboration and compliance; if the teacher is thedirector and principal actor, students must cooperate infilling the other roles in the drama. Indeed, as Cazden suggests in the analogy involvingclassroom, culture, "native" teacher and "immigrant" student, compliancein enacted performances is what "doing school" is all about. If a smoothly run class is an enacted drama,then we might consider the actions of a resistant participant as somethingakin to the alienation devices of Brecht, who sought to break the spellof the drama by bringing the audience's attention to their immediatesurroundings. The very necessity of compliance in enacted drama, that is,raises the possibility of resistance in the form of breaking the spell ofthe drama. Cazden (1988) discusses this possibility in terms of "unofficial peerculture" (p. 150), "secondary adjustments to institutional expectations"(p. 153), and "oppositional processes" (p. 153). A clearer understandingof the mechanics of resistance, however, and especially ofthe way resistance is initiated and sustained through interactive language processes,is available if we use the concept of participant framework(O'Connor and Michaels, 1993; Goodwin, 1990), which refers to the ways"that speech-event participants are aligned with each other or inopposition to each other and, moreover, how they arepositioned relative to topics and even utterances" (O'Connor and Michaels, 1993, p. 321). Inschool, the default participant framework has a participant structure (Erickson,1982) with conventional interactional rights and responsibilities for teacherand student talk and conventional patterns of animation (Goffman,1981) in which speakers give each other roles and social identities relevant totheir talk. O'Connor and Michaels (1993) make the point that participantsin discourse constantly renew and sometimesrenegotiate the participant framework throughtheir 4 4 talk. Just as teachers and studentsmaintain the default framework by sustaining roles and social identitiesthrough their remarks, teachers and students can negotiate changes in thedefault framework. The possibility of adjusting the participant framework iswhat makes resistance worthwhile, and accordingly, it is where this studybreaks with the conventional view where resistance is seen as isolatedfrom the primary classroom language socialization process. Resistance is aninteractive part of the primary classroom language socialization processprecisely because it seeks to alter that process through negotiationof the participant framework, negotiation which begins with breaking the spell ofthe enacted drama. Resistance, then, is comprised ofchallenges to the authority of the teacher and reified knowledge, andthe challenges show up in student language which breaks the spell of theenacted drama, thus opposing and possibly altering the conventional participantframework in classroom discourse. In what follows, I show howthis definition of resistance describes the remarks of a student namedShajuan2 in his role as a participaat in a 30 minute small-groupclassroom discussion. At several points in the dialogue, Shajuan seems tomake inappropriate and ill-timed remarks which might be attributed to alack of communicative competence. I argue that Shajuan is not merelyinternipting the performance but is challenging it by trying on different roles,especially that of the teacher or stage manager, and byattempting to change the ongoingconstruction of a conventional classroom participant stnicture.This second perspective suggests that Shajuan possessesclassroom communicative competencebut chooses not to comply with playing astudent's role consistently or completely. He is more interested inthe mechanics of the lesson,

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