Despite considerable sociolinguistic research on correlates of social identity in secondary schools, the initial discursive construction of social categories remains underexplored. A discourse analysis of third-grade lessons suggests teachers discursively position some students as weaker than others by framing their participation as tentative or reluctant, and are less likely to acknowledge such students\u27 summonses and called-out contributions. Ultimately, we argue, students whose academic identity development is thus not nurtured and who are denied access to the discursive power to advance ideas may instead seek empowerment through resistance, developing oppositional relationships toward school and forming another generation of \u27bu...
Curriculum as a Resource for the Development of Social Identity This article describes how categorie...
This paper aims at reporting how teachers (re)construct student identity in their English as foreign...
This dissertation was a discourse analysis of how beginning English teachers’ talk contributes to th...
Teachers are increasingly called on to use dialogic teaching practices to engage active pupil partic...
textThis Nested case study examines how reader identities emerged in everyday talk in one fifth-grad...
In this study of students in a combined kindergarten-first grade class, the impact of students &apos...
Recent debate on the standard classroom Initiation–Response–Follow-up pattern has focused particular...
School socializes children into institutional and academic practices. Because socialization occurs o...
This article describes how categories from the curriculum can play a central role in the interaction...
This research project aims at identifying and analyzing different identities students construct as l...
Although discussion has long played a role in classroom learning, recent focus on moving discussion ...
The process of social identification draws on heterogeneous resources from several levels of explana...
This study presents a sequential analysis of the enactment of teacher identity in closing disagreeme...
Existing research reveals too little about how elementary-level students make sense of their teacher...
This study explores discourse conflicts in schooling and society through an investigation of the way...
Curriculum as a Resource for the Development of Social Identity This article describes how categorie...
This paper aims at reporting how teachers (re)construct student identity in their English as foreign...
This dissertation was a discourse analysis of how beginning English teachers’ talk contributes to th...
Teachers are increasingly called on to use dialogic teaching practices to engage active pupil partic...
textThis Nested case study examines how reader identities emerged in everyday talk in one fifth-grad...
In this study of students in a combined kindergarten-first grade class, the impact of students &apos...
Recent debate on the standard classroom Initiation–Response–Follow-up pattern has focused particular...
School socializes children into institutional and academic practices. Because socialization occurs o...
This article describes how categories from the curriculum can play a central role in the interaction...
This research project aims at identifying and analyzing different identities students construct as l...
Although discussion has long played a role in classroom learning, recent focus on moving discussion ...
The process of social identification draws on heterogeneous resources from several levels of explana...
This study presents a sequential analysis of the enactment of teacher identity in closing disagreeme...
Existing research reveals too little about how elementary-level students make sense of their teacher...
This study explores discourse conflicts in schooling and society through an investigation of the way...
Curriculum as a Resource for the Development of Social Identity This article describes how categorie...
This paper aims at reporting how teachers (re)construct student identity in their English as foreign...
This dissertation was a discourse analysis of how beginning English teachers’ talk contributes to th...