Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective

This paper presents an ecological perspective on meaning-making, conceptualised as developing intentionality and exemplified with reference to three international TESOL settings. The paper draws on philosophical and folk-psychological perspectives on intentionality, including Searle’s (1983) distinc...

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Main Authors: Juup Stelma, Zeynep Onat-Stelma, Woojoo Lee, Achilleas Kostoulas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Columbia University Libraries 2015-06-01
Series:Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
Subjects:
Online Access:https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8RV20NR/download
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spelling doaj-e90226d9fb824fe79516531b70ee6bc22020-11-25T02:36:58ZengColumbia University LibrariesWorking Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL2576-29072576-29072015-06-01151143210.7916/D8GH9WMSIntentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological PerspectiveJuup Stelma0Zeynep Onat-Stelma1Woojoo Lee2Achilleas Kostoulas3Manchester Institute of Education, The University of ManchesterManchester Institute of Education, The University of ManchesterDepartment of English, Dongyang UniversityManchester Institute of Education, The University of ManchesterThis paper presents an ecological perspective on meaning-making, conceptualised as developing intentionality and exemplified with reference to three international TESOL settings. The paper draws on philosophical and folk-psychological perspectives on intentionality, including Searle’s (1983) distinction between intrinsic (individual) and derived (social) forms of intentionality and Young, DePalma and Garrett’s (2002) modelling of intentional dynamics in educational settings. The paper illustrates the analytical affordances of the perspective through sample analyses of intentional dynamics found in three international TESOL settings. This includes: (i) young learners’ interpretations of love and marriage in a joint writing task in a Norwegian primary L2 classroom, (ii) a Turkish teacher’s first experience of teaching English to young learners, and (iii) the impact of the English as the global language phenomenon on the teaching of English to young learners in South Korea. The paper concludes that explorations of intentional dynamics on different levels of language education activities can enhance our ecological understanding of the cognitive, social and political dimensions of TESOL.https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8RV20NR/downloadEnglish languageStudy and teachingLanguage studyTeaching languageSemanticsPhilosophyEcologyApplied linguisticsTESOL
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juup Stelma
Zeynep Onat-Stelma
Woojoo Lee
Achilleas Kostoulas
spellingShingle Juup Stelma
Zeynep Onat-Stelma
Woojoo Lee
Achilleas Kostoulas
Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective
Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
English language
Study and teaching
Language study
Teaching language
Semantics
Philosophy
Ecology
Applied linguistics
TESOL
author_facet Juup Stelma
Zeynep Onat-Stelma
Woojoo Lee
Achilleas Kostoulas
author_sort Juup Stelma
title Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective
title_short Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective
title_full Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective
title_fullStr Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Intentional Dynamics in TESOL: An Ecological Perspective
title_sort intentional dynamics in tesol: an ecological perspective
publisher Columbia University Libraries
series Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL
issn 2576-2907
2576-2907
publishDate 2015-06-01
description This paper presents an ecological perspective on meaning-making, conceptualised as developing intentionality and exemplified with reference to three international TESOL settings. The paper draws on philosophical and folk-psychological perspectives on intentionality, including Searle’s (1983) distinction between intrinsic (individual) and derived (social) forms of intentionality and Young, DePalma and Garrett’s (2002) modelling of intentional dynamics in educational settings. The paper illustrates the analytical affordances of the perspective through sample analyses of intentional dynamics found in three international TESOL settings. This includes: (i) young learners’ interpretations of love and marriage in a joint writing task in a Norwegian primary L2 classroom, (ii) a Turkish teacher’s first experience of teaching English to young learners, and (iii) the impact of the English as the global language phenomenon on the teaching of English to young learners in South Korea. The paper concludes that explorations of intentional dynamics on different levels of language education activities can enhance our ecological understanding of the cognitive, social and political dimensions of TESOL.
topic English language
Study and teaching
Language study
Teaching language
Semantics
Philosophy
Ecology
Applied linguistics
TESOL
url https://academiccommons.columbia.edu/doi/10.7916/D8RV20NR/download
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AT woojoolee intentionaldynamicsintesolanecologicalperspective
AT achilleaskostoulas intentionaldynamicsintesolanecologicalperspective
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