Teachers’ gestures for building listening and spoken language skills

IF 4.6 Q2 MATERIALS SCIENCE, BIOMATERIALS
Kristella Montiegel
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT This study investigates teachers’ gestures produced during directive actions. I examine three particular gestures—pointing to the mouth, pointing to the ear, and cupping the ear— that teachers frequently deployed when interacting with their deaf or hard-of-hearing students in an oral preschool classroom, a setting focused on spoken language and listening. Using conversation analysis, I find that teachers’ gestures occurred in sequences involving multiple directives to students and were routinely produced as subsequent directives, following students’ noncompliance or displays of trouble related to teachers’ initial directives. These gestural directives are used in two main instructional contexts: when targeting students’ linguistic abilities and when managing classroom conduct. The findings reveal a paradox whereby teachers’ gestures contribute to the classroom goal of socialization into oral communication, despite them being nonverbal resources in a setting that overtly prioritizes spoken language. Data consists of 25 hours of video recordings in one oral classroom in California.
教师培养听力和口语技能的手势
摘要本研究探讨教师在指令动作中所产生的手势。我研究了三种特殊的手势——指向嘴、指向耳朵和托住耳朵——这是老师在学龄前口语课堂上与聋哑或听力障碍的学生互动时经常使用的手势,这是一个专注于口语和听力的环境。通过对话分析,我发现教师的手势是顺序发生的,涉及对学生的多个指令,并且在学生不遵守或表现出与教师初始指令相关的麻烦之后,通常会产生后续指令。这些手势指令主要用于两种教学环境:针对学生的语言能力和管理课堂行为。研究结果揭示了一个悖论,即教师的手势有助于将课堂目标社会化为口语交流,尽管它们是在明显优先考虑口语的环境中的非语言资源。数据包括加利福尼亚一个口语课堂25小时的录像。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
ACS Applied Bio Materials
ACS Applied Bio Materials Chemistry-Chemistry (all)
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
2.10%
发文量
464
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