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Dialogic teaching in language classrooms

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Dialogic teaching. in language classrooms. Do you know what RHINOs are? ... Cognitive / Pedagogical Dissonance. Intervention Strategies and Learning experiences ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Dialogic teaching in language classrooms


1
Dialogic teachingin language classrooms
2
Do you know what RHINOs are?
Do you discover any Rhinos in your classrooms?
  • Really Here In Name Only

3
How often are you a Rhino?
When? Where? In what contexts?
Well, how often do you discover parrots in your
class?
4
Common types of language classroom talks
  • Expository
  • Interrogatory
  • Dialogic
  • Evaluative

5
Classroom talks as a vehicle for
  • Rote learning
  • Exposition or Explanation
  • Direct instruction
  • Scaffolded instruction

6
Classroom talks as a vehicle for
  • Problem solving
  • Task completion
  • Enquiry
  • Discussion

7
Learning talks
  • The ability to narrate, explain, question,
    answer, discuss, negotiate and
  • The preparedness to listen, to be receptive to
    ideas

8
Teaching talk
  • Rote (teacher class)
  • the drilling of forms, sounds etc. through
    constant repetition
  • Recitation (teacher-class or teacher-group)
  • cues to stimulate recall of what has been learned

9
Teaching talk (cont)
  • Instruction/exposition (teacher-class,
    teacher-group, teacher-individual)
  • instruct, impart information, explain

10
Teaching talk (cont)
  • Scaffolded dialogue (teacher-class,
    teacher-group, teacher-individual, pupil-pupil)
  • cueing for responses from pupils through
    structured or sequenced prompts

11
Teaching talk (cont)
  • Discussion (pupil-pupil with or without teacher)
  • talk among members intended to enable ideas,
    information to be shared or problems to be solved

12
The tripartite dialogic repertoire for language
teachers
  • Learning talk - narrate, explain, question and
    answer, active listening
  • Teaching talk - rote, recitation, exposition,
    discussion, dialogue
  • Interactive strategies (whole class teaching,
    group work led by teacher, group work led by
    students, paired work, one-to-one teacher-pupil
    discussion)

13
Five dialogic principles
  • Collective
  • T/P address learning tasks together
  • Reciprocal
  • T/P active listening and sharing
  • Supportive
  • P expresses freely in a supportive environment

14
Five dialogic principles (cont)
  • Cumulative
  • T/P build on own ideas and construct new
    understanding
  • Purposeful
  • T plans and steer classroom talk with specific
    educational goals in view

15
Dialogic teaching and Collaborative Lesson
Planning
  • Manipulating and relating the tripartite dialogic
    repertoire and the five dialogic principles to
    curriculum planning, putting it in action, and
    reflect

16
Teachers dialogues as triggers to cycles of
transformation
Growth and Development
Problem Situations
Cognitive / Pedagogical Dissonance
Reflections
Intervention Strategies and Learning experiences
17
Teachers dialogues as triggers to cycles of
transformation
  • Problem Situations
  • Cognitive/ Pedagogical
  • Dissonance

18
Intervention Strategies and Learning
experiences
19
  • The task is a piece of meaning-focused work
    involving learners in comprehending, producing
    and/or interacting in the target language, and
    the tasks are analyzed according to their goals,
    input, activities, settings and roles.
  • (Nunan, 1992)

20
  • Reflections
  • When?
  • How deep?
  • Who?
  • Why?

21
Features of interactive teaching
  • Surface features
  • Engaging pupils
  • Pupil practical and active involvement
  • Broad pupil participation
  • Collaborative activity
  • Conveying knowledge

22
  • Deep features
  • Assessing and extending knowledge
  • Reciprocity and meaning making
  • Attention to thinking and learning skills
  • Attention to pupils social and emotional
    needs/skills

23
The range of possible questions to ask in
teachers dialogues
  • On intentions/purposes
  • What were your intentions/aims/ in using this
    strategy
  • How far successful?
  • Your expectations on pupils?
  • Did the context influence your purposes?

24
On Self awareness
  • Feelings at the moment?
  • Roots to this feeling?

25
On Technical reflection
  • What were you doing?
  • How did you decide what outcomes were
    appropriate?
  • Why chose this strategy?
  • Breaking down into different aspects
  • How prior experiences influence your actions?

26
On Practical reflection
  • Your assumption?
  • Alternate actions/solutions?
  • Other sources of alternate knowledge?
  • What values were presented in your teaching?

27
On Critical reflection
  • What ethical/moral choices made?
  • What wider forces applied?
  • How are pupils affected by your actions?
  • Does the practice offer equality?
  • Moyles et. al. (2003)
  • Interactive Teaching in the Primary School

28
  • Growth and development in knowledge, skills and
    dispositions in language teaching and learning
  • What has been learned?
  • How is it learned ?

29
Variations in the curriculum design and teaching
strategies by schools focus of dialogues in the
sharing session
  • Group 1
  • Moving away from guided writing
  • - Encouraging discussion among pupils

30
Variations in the curriculum design and teaching
strategies by schools focus of dialogues in the
sharing session (cont)
  • Group 2
  • Using graphic organizers to improve reading and
    writing
  • - Interacting with the prints for meaning

31
Variations in the curriculum design and teaching
strategies by schools focus of dialogues in the
sharing session (cont)
  • Group 3
  • Promoting oral interaction
  • The Input Practice Feedback loop

32
Variations in the curriculum design and teaching
strategies by schools focus of dialogues in the
sharing session (cont)
  • Group 4
  • Journal writing as a method to improve students
    writing
  • - Allowing genuine communication between teachers
    and students

33
Variations in the curriculum design and teaching
strategies by schools focus of dialogues in the
sharing session (cont)
  • Group 5
  • Reading workshop
  • - Using instructional strategies to help
    construct meaning from texts

Teachers
Students
Construct meaning
Texts
34
(No Transcript)
35
A final note
  • Beyond the dialogue of the voices, then, is a
    dialogue of minds.
  • (Alexander, 2005)
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