This article describes how categories from the curriculum can play a central role in the interactional construction of students’ identities. Drawing on data from one ninth-grade English and history class across an academic year, the article describes an adolescent who was assigned and came to enact the identity of a disruptive outcast from the classroom community. It then describes how this student’s identity development was facilitated by discussions of a curricular theme. The article traces the student’s trajectory across the year and then analyzes one classroom discussion in detail, showing the interactional construction of her alienation from school and how this construction was mediated through curricular categories
Despite considerable sociolinguistic research on correlates of social identity in secondary schools,...
This study aims to explore and better understand the narratives that high school students tell about...
This study sought to understand the influence of institutional structures of tracking and ability-gr...
Curriculum as a Resource for the Development of Social Identity This article describes how categorie...
The process of social identification draws on heterogeneous resources from several levels of explana...
When students and teachers discuss subject matter, at least two processes gen-erally occur: Students...
The Interdependence of Social Identification and Learning When students and teachers discuss subject...
As technological advances provide minute-by-minute updates of current events and personalized media ...
This paper describes one way in which students develop durable, classroom-specific identities. When ...
textThis Nested case study examines how reader identities emerged in everyday talk in one fifth-grad...
Early adolescence is a time for students to move beyond interests-based definitions of themselves - ...
Social Identification Beyond the Speech Event School socializes children into institutional and acad...
This article discusses the way in which social identities structure the learning processes of studen...
Inequalities occur in opportunities to engage in school. Adolescents’ learner identities, their self...
This article discusses the way in which social identities structure the learning processes of studen...
Despite considerable sociolinguistic research on correlates of social identity in secondary schools,...
This study aims to explore and better understand the narratives that high school students tell about...
This study sought to understand the influence of institutional structures of tracking and ability-gr...
Curriculum as a Resource for the Development of Social Identity This article describes how categorie...
The process of social identification draws on heterogeneous resources from several levels of explana...
When students and teachers discuss subject matter, at least two processes gen-erally occur: Students...
The Interdependence of Social Identification and Learning When students and teachers discuss subject...
As technological advances provide minute-by-minute updates of current events and personalized media ...
This paper describes one way in which students develop durable, classroom-specific identities. When ...
textThis Nested case study examines how reader identities emerged in everyday talk in one fifth-grad...
Early adolescence is a time for students to move beyond interests-based definitions of themselves - ...
Social Identification Beyond the Speech Event School socializes children into institutional and acad...
This article discusses the way in which social identities structure the learning processes of studen...
Inequalities occur in opportunities to engage in school. Adolescents’ learner identities, their self...
This article discusses the way in which social identities structure the learning processes of studen...
Despite considerable sociolinguistic research on correlates of social identity in secondary schools,...
This study aims to explore and better understand the narratives that high school students tell about...
This study sought to understand the influence of institutional structures of tracking and ability-gr...