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Realising student voice through dialogic engagement with a microblogging tool

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

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Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Cook, V 

Abstract

Student voice is central to a dialogic pedagogy and its supporting classroom ethos. However, the realisation of voice is a particularly challenging aspect of dialogue. The aim of this study is to explore how a microblogging tool creates conditions for the realisation of student voice through creating purposeful opportunities to speak and be heard by others. Drawing on data collected as part of a larger international study, analysis of student focus group interviews (aged 11-12 years) in two schools in England (n=36) suggest that the use of a microblogging tool can develop student agency, helping to realise student voice by removing the struggle to capture and maintain the floor and enabling students to become attuned to the ideas of others. However, some students were concerned about the tool’s democratic use, particularly with respect to the struggle to have their ideas heeded by the teacher. Guided by this finding, a detailed micro-analysis of interactions of video data, lesson transcripts and microblog meta-data explores how students’ microblogging contributions were heeded by three teachers in one school. We consider the pedagogical implications of these findings, exploring the juxtaposition between a school culture that celebrates individual achievement and the culture of a dialogic classroom, which must celebrate the sharing of ideas. For such classrooms, this research indicates that student commitment to dialogic interaction is encouraged where the ideas of all students are, as far as possible, acknowledged by the teacher and used in developing collective ideas.

Description

Keywords

Student voice, dialogue, pedagogy, microblogging, inclusion

Journal Title

Education 3-13

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0300-4279
1475-7575

Volume Title

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Research Council of Norway (via University of Oslo) (Dept: 180100; Proj: 144214)