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Dialogic practices in primary school classrooms

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Abstract

Research into classroom dialogue suggests that certain forms are especially productive for students’ learning (Howe and Abedin, 2013). Despite the large number of studies in this area, there is inadequate evidence about the prevalence of the identified forms, let alone their productivity. However, scarcity is widely presumed. The overall aim of the study reported in this paper was to examine the extent to which the forms are embedded within current practice in UK primary schools. Video-recordings of two lessons from each of 36 classrooms formed the database, with two subjects from mathematics, English and science covered in each classroom. Each lesson was coded per turn for the presence of ‘dialogic moves’ and rated overall for the level of student involvement in specified activities. Results revealed that the supposedly productive forms were not always as scarce as sometimes presumed, while also highlighting huge variation in their relative occurrence. They also point to the role of professional development for teachers in promoting use of some forms.

Description

Keywords

Classroom dialogue, classroom interaction, primary school education, teacher professional development (PD)

Journal Title

Language and Education

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0950-0782
1747-7581

Volume Title

33

Publisher

Informa UK Limited
Sponsorship
Economic and Social Research Council (ES/M007103/1)