Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research

A review of Skidmore, D & K. Murakami (Eds). (2016). Dialogic pedagogy: The importance of dialogue in teaching and learning. Bristol, United Kingdom: Multilingual Matters Skidmore and Murakami’s collection of essays takes on a dual theoretical and empirical project: first, to define and advocat...

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Main Author: Christian George Gregory
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Library System, University of Pittsburgh 2020-02-01
Series:Dialogic Pedagogy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dpj.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/dpj1/article/view/313
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spelling doaj-f6b6a671d54c4e0c9a41450714d174592020-11-25T02:11:36ZengUniversity Library System, University of PittsburghDialogic Pedagogy2325-32902020-02-018010.5195/dpj.2020.313120Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom ResearchChristian George Gregory0Saint Anselm CollegeA review of Skidmore, D & K. Murakami (Eds). (2016). Dialogic pedagogy: The importance of dialogue in teaching and learning. Bristol, United Kingdom: Multilingual Matters Skidmore and Murakami’s collection of essays takes on a dual theoretical and empirical project: first, to define and advocate for dialogical classroom pedagogy; and second, to unearth such practice through microstudies of classroom dialogue. This project divides itself neatly in half: the first six chapters trace the theory of dialogic pedagogy, including the history of discourse, coding, and practices, while the remaining seven are devoted to empirical studies marked by a careful microanalysis of dialogue. The work distinguishes itself from scholarship on the dialogical the past 20 years, during which works have either been single-authored, deeply-researched, and theoretical (Matusov, 2009a; Wegerif, 2013) or vast collections of essays organized conceptually (Ball & Freedman, 2004; White & Peters, 2011; Ligorio & Cesar, 2013). While special journal editions have brought new focus to unexplored threads of the dialogical, such as the exploration of silence in the classroom or the history of the School of the Dialogue of Cultures (Matusov 2009b), this collection affords considerable latitude to its theoretical and historical frame. A comparable work of conceptual breadth is that of White (2016), whose publication frames classroom research of lower school learners with concepts from Bakhtin. Like White’s work, Skidmore and Murakami paint at once in broad strokes and miniature: on the one hand, the collection situates dialogical pedagogy into its historical context, interweaving the work of early Russian theorists; at the same time, it offers granular studies of classroom dialogue. Since Skidmore authors or co-authors seven of the 13 chapters, the collection somewhat serves as a project of singular intent, one that raises a persistent question as to whether the methodologies in the studies presented in the second half of the work, focused on Conversational Analysis (CA) and the Discourse Analysis (DA), cohere to the ambitions of dialogical pedagogy offered in the first. In the end, the promise that CA affords greater magnification of classroom moments does not overcome what may be a limitation of the methodology to unearth dialogic pedagogy.http://dpj.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/dpj1/article/view/313dialogical pedagogyconversational analysisdiscourse analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christian George Gregory
spellingShingle Christian George Gregory
Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research
Dialogic Pedagogy
dialogical pedagogy
conversational analysis
discourse analysis
author_facet Christian George Gregory
author_sort Christian George Gregory
title Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research
title_short Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research
title_full Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research
title_fullStr Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research
title_full_unstemmed Theoretical Promises and Methodological Troubles Capturing Dialogical Discourse in Classroom Research
title_sort theoretical promises and methodological troubles capturing dialogical discourse in classroom research
publisher University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
series Dialogic Pedagogy
issn 2325-3290
publishDate 2020-02-01
description A review of Skidmore, D & K. Murakami (Eds). (2016). Dialogic pedagogy: The importance of dialogue in teaching and learning. Bristol, United Kingdom: Multilingual Matters Skidmore and Murakami’s collection of essays takes on a dual theoretical and empirical project: first, to define and advocate for dialogical classroom pedagogy; and second, to unearth such practice through microstudies of classroom dialogue. This project divides itself neatly in half: the first six chapters trace the theory of dialogic pedagogy, including the history of discourse, coding, and practices, while the remaining seven are devoted to empirical studies marked by a careful microanalysis of dialogue. The work distinguishes itself from scholarship on the dialogical the past 20 years, during which works have either been single-authored, deeply-researched, and theoretical (Matusov, 2009a; Wegerif, 2013) or vast collections of essays organized conceptually (Ball & Freedman, 2004; White & Peters, 2011; Ligorio & Cesar, 2013). While special journal editions have brought new focus to unexplored threads of the dialogical, such as the exploration of silence in the classroom or the history of the School of the Dialogue of Cultures (Matusov 2009b), this collection affords considerable latitude to its theoretical and historical frame. A comparable work of conceptual breadth is that of White (2016), whose publication frames classroom research of lower school learners with concepts from Bakhtin. Like White’s work, Skidmore and Murakami paint at once in broad strokes and miniature: on the one hand, the collection situates dialogical pedagogy into its historical context, interweaving the work of early Russian theorists; at the same time, it offers granular studies of classroom dialogue. Since Skidmore authors or co-authors seven of the 13 chapters, the collection somewhat serves as a project of singular intent, one that raises a persistent question as to whether the methodologies in the studies presented in the second half of the work, focused on Conversational Analysis (CA) and the Discourse Analysis (DA), cohere to the ambitions of dialogical pedagogy offered in the first. In the end, the promise that CA affords greater magnification of classroom moments does not overcome what may be a limitation of the methodology to unearth dialogic pedagogy.
topic dialogical pedagogy
conversational analysis
discourse analysis
url http://dpj.pitt.edu/ojs/index.php/dpj1/article/view/313
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