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dc.contributor.authorGoncalves Lago, Leonardo
dc.date.accessioned2022-03-01T16:25:13Z
dc.date.available2022-03-01T16:25:13Z
dc.date.submitted2021-10-31
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/334555
dc.description.abstractThis thesis studies the adherence of a talk-intensive approach to teaching and ‎learning in the Brazilian context. While classroom talk is often classified as monologic ‎due to being narrow and controlled by teachers, educational research has identified a ‎kind of collaborative and cognitively productive talk that positively affects learning ‎outcomes. This dialogic talk is rare in most classrooms. Many teacher professional ‎development programmes have been designed to bridge this gap. This project builds ‎on this vast literature to explore three key aspects in the development of a more ‎dialogic classroom talk: small-group work, conceptual learning, and whole-class ‎teaching.‎ To produce such a dialogic case, an intensive, small-scale, researcher-led ‎intervention was implemented in one primary school. The programme lasted for three ‎months and consisted of three modules, each focusing in one of the aspects ‎highlighted above. Data consisted of pre-post knowledge tests, audio recording of ‎small-group work, video recording of whole-class teaching, and interviews. Classroom ‎talk was analysed through both quantitative and qualitative methods. Within the ‎Brazilian research field, this study is arguably the first with such aims and scope.‎ In small-group talk, students spent only half of the time talking about the task’s ‎content, when they used one third of dialogic utterances. Group talk features varied ‎reasonably across tasks and no positive variation was found regarding dialogicity. It is ‎argued that the students did not appropriate the use of ground rules for talk ‎effectively. Although statistically significant, only small effects were found on students’ ‎learning (knowledge tests). This result was discussed in relation to the role of different ‎teaching modalities, talk formats, and classroom climate in promoting the co-‎construction of knowledge. The investigation showed how talk served as a means for ‎learning. More specifically, five types of explanatory sequences were identified when ‎teachers and students collectively built scientific explanations. In whole-class ‎teaching, episodes of teachers’ dialogic practices were analysed and revealed which ‎conditions favoured such emergence.‎ Overall, this research sheds light on the potentialities and challenges of dialogic ‎practices in a Brazilian primary school. The study contributes with new empirical data ‎by systematically mapping groups’ and teachers’ discursive practices over seven ‎tasks and nine lessons. Pre-designed classroom materials were very productive in ‎fostering dialogic talk and teachers made many different decisions to render their own ‎lessons more dialogic. Finally, the broad scope of this thesis—connecting ‎professional development, use of classroom materials, student learning, and ‎classroom talk— allowed putting forward recommendations for future intervention ‎such as duration, pace, content, data-based reflective inquiry, and dialogic culture.‎
dc.description.sponsorshipCAPES (Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior ); COT (Cambridge Trust)
dc.rightsAll Rights Reserved
dc.rights.urihttps://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/
dc.subjectWhole-class teaching
dc.subjectSmall-group work
dc.subjectClassroom dialogue
dc.subjectConceptual learning
dc.subjectScience Education
dc.titleDiscursive interactions in a Brazilian primary school: an exploratory case study
dc.typeThesis
dc.type.qualificationlevelDoctoral
dc.type.qualificationnameDoctor of Philosophy (PhD)
dc.publisher.institutionUniversity of Cambridge
dc.date.updated2022-02-25T13:35:15Z
dc.identifier.doi10.17863/CAM.81974
rioxxterms.licenseref.urihttps://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/
rioxxterms.typeThesis
dc.publisher.collegeHomerton
cam.supervisorWinterbottom, Mark
cam.supervisorHowe, Christine
cam.supervisor.orcidWinterbottom, Mark [0000-0001-8748-6733]
cam.depositDate2022-02-25
pubs.licence-identifierapollo-deposit-licence-2-1
pubs.licence-display-nameApollo Repository Deposit Licence Agreement


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