1. Describe the stages from transmission to transformation and the teacher’s role in these.
Transmission is the basic point, it is a core. There is just one person who gives the knowledge to learners. In one-way, mono-logic format. And from there, there is 2 stages to transformations. They are IRF questioning and transaction.
IRF questioning shows the performance.
Transaction is a kind of knowledge exchange. Learners make group discussion. Collective studying is important.
After these two steps, transformation is the last step. Transformation, in this case teacher is not just role agenda, students also learners follow the teacher and they also attribute their knowledge. Transmission to transformation interaction the talk becomes increasingly conversational.
Teacher’s Role:
Transformation learning occurs when the learner‘s thinking and perceptions of the world and their place in it are altered as a result of the acquisition of new knowledge. For this to occur students must integrate new knowledge so that it becomes a part of themselves allowing them to make connections and use the new knowledge to deepen their understanding of themselves and their world. Teachers have a key role to play in creating a transformative learning experience. They must encourage discovery by problematical the curriculum and inviting students to examine their personal assumptions, explore a range of perspectives and possibilities and test them all for validity. In so doing, teachers contribute to creating a community of thinkers in which inquiring minds are nurtured. Classrooms of inquiry help to ensure meaningful, trans-formative learning occurs as they engage students in the examinations of beliefs and assumptions and the formation of new ideas that emerge from the synthesis of new learning and past experiences.
Transformation Learning occurs when:
Critical inquiry contributes to a heightened awareness of oneself within a global context, one's beliefs, and the impact of one's actions on self, others and the world around us.
2. The characteristic of Dialogue and Conversation
Each type of speaking activity is different and allows students to practice different skills related to learning a second language.
There is an element of turn taking in dialogue:
Dialogue involves not just turn-taking but connecting. Perhaps intersecting is a better word. What I say in response to you connects with what you have said. And your responses to me connect with what I have said. We connect.
Discussion and debate involve give-and-take. Dialogue is not about being spontaneously agreeable. Nor is it about giving in. In true dialogue, conversational partners touch each other in some way. They rub ideas, opinions, and points of view together. Statements such as, "Well, let me think about that," are indications of give-and-take.
We ‘join in’ dialogue. We become ‘involved’ in dialogue. In dialogue, the conversation takes its own ‘twists’ and reaches its own conclusions. In dialogue conversational partners do not know in advance what will ‘come out’ of a conversation. True dialogue has a ’spirit of its own’.
Dialogue is sth like dancing.‘I-lead-you/you-follow-me’ dancing, but free-form dancing. When you dance, you don't try to score points or ‘win’ in any way. Instead, you work as partners, responding to each other's movements and trying not to tread on each others toes. The idea is to co-operate, rather than compete, so you both enjoy the experience. The outcome is a good time together.
Conversation:
Between two or more students; the students are given a topic to discuss, and engage in spontaneous conversation related to the topic. There is no script to use; students must develop the conversation entirely on their own.Conversation is like a journey with the speakers going from one place to another.
A dialogue is a reciprocal conversation between two or more entities. It is an effective means of on-going communication rather than as a purposive attempt to reach some conclusion or to express some viewpoint(s).
Conversation is more of purposive attempt to reach some conclusion or to express some viewpoints(s) among two or more entities.
3. Describe the advantages vs. disadvantages of:
the IRF-exchange
the turn-taking/ nomination of one specific pupil in class to answer teacher’s questions vs. the opposite approach, non-appointing or nominating
1. IRF
Main features:
Advantages:
Disadvantages of IRF- exchange:
It is good to take respond from the initiator and to be evaluated,otherwise, the conversation would be meaningless.
2.Turn-taking refers to the process by which people in a conversation decide who is to speak next.
Teacher in the class should ask each student to express their ideas that’s why turn- taking is quite important.
The Advantages:
*students express different ideas.
*students hear various viewpoints.
*students improve their thinking and speaking skills.
The Disadvantages:
*students can feel confused in understanding the questions coming from the external situation.
* students may not give proper responses.They may just give short answers or sth like hımmm...welll...ummmm…
4. Describe contingency in a classroom and the different components therein (See figure 20)
Equality and symmetry are important components for classroom interaction. Teacher is power and then how can you ensure the equality? If you distinguish between these two components then you can find a solution to be equal in the classroom. Symmetry is relation with talking. One’s talking follows the other.
5. Analise of the cases regarding to van Lier’s
contingency interaction theory.
Topic: Temporal expressions
Case 1
In Case 1 there is this typical structure: Initiation,
Response and Feedback. We
could ask the students to ask the next question. The teacher then can still
give a feedback but in this case the students have a bigger chance to speak and
they also improve the task to ask questions.
Case 2
In the second case I would let the students ask
questions to each other. I think after a while it maybe should be possible that
they try to ask and answer the questions in small group.
Topic: Weather
Case 1
In this case it could be good if the teacher first
asks the whole class for the answer, give some more time that the students can
think about the answer and then pick a student.
The sentence from the third student, which the teacher
corrects, could be written on the blackboard, so that all the students have the
chance to see the right form again.
Case 2
After this situation in the whole class the students
can try to do the same in small groups and to ask and answer different
questions. If the students aren’t good enough to ask questions on their own,
the teacher can write some down on the blackboard.