Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning

<p>The topic of pacing at the level of the individual class hour has received relatively little coverage in research literature. In order to provide a research-based take on the issue, the current work surveys the existing literature, develops terminology and draws a key distinction between ma...

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Main Author: Joshua Goldsmith
Format: Article
Language:Catalan
Published: Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona 2010-02-01
Series:Bellaterra Journal of Teaching & Learning Language & Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistes.uab.cat/jtl3/article/view/34
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spelling doaj-e17dbee576684cb490e1da3efba6d1362021-05-04T16:12:41ZcatUniversitat Autònoma de BarcelonaBellaterra Journal of Teaching & Learning Language & Literature2013-61962010-02-0111304810.5565/rev/jtl3.3465Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planningJoshua Goldsmith<p>The topic of pacing at the level of the individual class hour has received relatively little coverage in research literature. In order to provide a research-based take on the issue, the current work surveys the existing literature, develops terminology and draws a key distinction between macro-, meso-, and micro-levels of pacing, sequencing, grading, and transitioning.</p><p> </p><p>In order to focus on one of pacing’s constituent sub-topics—the allocation of classroom time—this article presents a case study of a first semester college-level introductory German class at a top-tier American university. The data come from two hours of class, one each from the beginning and end of the semester, in an attempt to discover not only how pacing affects teaching synchronically but also how it might change diachronically. Utterances and gestures were transcribed in order to segment the class into activities and sub-activities, and a model for using verbal and gestural cues to perform this kind of segmentation is proposed. The paper also discusses how the teacher allocates time to different kinds of activities, considering pacing strategies that help keep students focused and “on plan” and how these pacing strategies can allow for more time and activities spent on communicative, pair-based work. It is argued that because of the case study teacher’s focus on pacing and use of various strategies to pace the class, not only researchers but also teachers might be able to generalize the micro- and meso-pacing model described in this study to the pacing of individual lessons in their own classrooms.</p>https://revistes.uab.cat/jtl3/article/view/34(micro-, meso-, and macro-) pacingtime allocationtime on-planclass hourlesson planning
collection DOAJ
language Catalan
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joshua Goldsmith
spellingShingle Joshua Goldsmith
Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
Bellaterra Journal of Teaching & Learning Language & Literature
(micro-, meso-, and macro-) pacing
time allocation
time on-plan
class hour
lesson planning
author_facet Joshua Goldsmith
author_sort Joshua Goldsmith
title Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
title_short Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
title_full Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
title_fullStr Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
title_full_unstemmed Pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: Why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
title_sort pacing and time allocation at the micro- and meso-level within the class hour: why pacing is important, how to study it, and what it implies for individual lesson planning
publisher Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
series Bellaterra Journal of Teaching & Learning Language & Literature
issn 2013-6196
publishDate 2010-02-01
description <p>The topic of pacing at the level of the individual class hour has received relatively little coverage in research literature. In order to provide a research-based take on the issue, the current work surveys the existing literature, develops terminology and draws a key distinction between macro-, meso-, and micro-levels of pacing, sequencing, grading, and transitioning.</p><p> </p><p>In order to focus on one of pacing’s constituent sub-topics—the allocation of classroom time—this article presents a case study of a first semester college-level introductory German class at a top-tier American university. The data come from two hours of class, one each from the beginning and end of the semester, in an attempt to discover not only how pacing affects teaching synchronically but also how it might change diachronically. Utterances and gestures were transcribed in order to segment the class into activities and sub-activities, and a model for using verbal and gestural cues to perform this kind of segmentation is proposed. The paper also discusses how the teacher allocates time to different kinds of activities, considering pacing strategies that help keep students focused and “on plan” and how these pacing strategies can allow for more time and activities spent on communicative, pair-based work. It is argued that because of the case study teacher’s focus on pacing and use of various strategies to pace the class, not only researchers but also teachers might be able to generalize the micro- and meso-pacing model described in this study to the pacing of individual lessons in their own classrooms.</p>
topic (micro-, meso-, and macro-) pacing
time allocation
time on-plan
class hour
lesson planning
url https://revistes.uab.cat/jtl3/article/view/34
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