The joint negotiation of ground rules: establishing a shared collaborative practice with new classroom technology
Kleine Staarman, Judith
Date: 26 February 2009
Article
Journal
Language and Education
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Classroom discourse is structured by socially accepted ways in which knowledge is
presented and by established procedures for carrying out educational activities. However,
the underlying linguistic and social ground rules are usually implicit, for students as well
as for teachers. The implicitness of these ground rules has been ...
Classroom discourse is structured by socially accepted ways in which knowledge is
presented and by established procedures for carrying out educational activities. However,
the underlying linguistic and social ground rules are usually implicit, for students as well
as for teachers. The implicitness of these ground rules has been attributed to students’
failure to successfully participate in educational discourse. In this article, I describe a
research project in which primary students jointly negotiated ground rules for working
together in an online discussion forum. The aims of the study were to examine (1) how
collaborative practices were created in interaction, and (2) how participants made visible
to each other what counted as appropriate collaborative discourse. The findings indicate
that there are many implicit ground rules in place when a new mode of communication
is introduced in the classroom. Moreover, students and teachers do not always share the
same (implicit) understanding about what is and is not an appropriate communicative
action in new learning environments. One of the conclusions that can be drawn from
the data is that when introducing new communication technology in classrooms a new
educational genre of communicating needs to be defined and underlying ground rules
need to be re-established within the particular educational context.
School of Education
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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