Patterns of peer talk in consensus-oriented classrooms: Deliberative argumentation or rush toward consensus?

IF 2 3区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Andreas Reichelt Lind, Emilia Andersson-Bakken, Margareth Sandvik
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Abstract

In this study, we investigate peer talk in consensus-oriented first-grade classrooms. Earlier research has shown that the quality of argumentation improves when students argue to agree, because it steers the students toward patterns of argumentation that support the exploration and elaboration of perspectives that is typical of deliberative argumentation. Using multi-modal argumentation analysis, we identify four patterns in the peer talk. First, the students invoked consensus when the conversation developed in a direction that was not in accordance with their understanding of the task instructions. Second, the students tended to delegate the authority to decide what the group will answer. Third, the students searched for the lowest common denominator, looking for a common element in their individual answers. Fourth, the students put the decision to a vote, going with the majority and ignoring the perspectives of the minority. We argue that these patterns illustrate a general tendency for the students to rush toward a conclusion. Accordingly, we argue that younger students need a more explicit instructional design by the teacher to support exploration and elaboration of different perspectives.

以共识为导向的课堂中同伴谈话的模式:审慎辩论还是急于达成共识?
在本研究中,我们调查了共识导向的一年级课堂中的同伴谈话。早期的研究表明,当学生们为达成一致而辩论时,辩论的质量会得到提高,因为它引导学生走向支持探索和阐述观点的辩论模式,这是典型的审慎辩论。通过多模态论证分析,我们确定了同伴谈话中的四种模式。首先,当对话朝着与他们对任务指示的理解不一致的方向发展时,学生们会调用共识。其次,学生们倾向于授权决定小组的回答。第三,学生们寻找最小公分母,在他们各自的答案中寻找共同的元素。第四,学生们将决定付诸投票,与多数人一致,忽视少数人的观点。我们认为,这些模式说明了学生急于得出结论的普遍倾向。因此,我们认为低年级学生需要教师更明确的教学设计,以支持不同观点的探索和阐述。
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来源期刊
Learning Culture and Social Interaction
Learning Culture and Social Interaction EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
10.50%
发文量
50
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