Dooly2022a

From emcawiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Dooly2022a
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Dooly2022a
Author(s) Melinda Dooly, Vincenza Tudini
Title ‘I Remember When I Was in Spain’: Student-Teacher Storytelling in Online Collaborative Task Accomplishment
Editor(s) Anna Filipi, Binh Thanh Ta, Maryanne Theobald
Tag(s) EMCA
Publisher Springer
Year 2022
Language English
City Singapore
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 283-309
URL Link
DOI 10.1007/978-981-16-9955-9_15
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Storytelling Practices in Home and Educational Contexts: Perspectives from Conversation Analysis
Chapter

Download BibTex

Abstract

This chapter applies a micro-analytical lens to explore how two student–teachers of foreign languages, one in the USA, the other in Spain, engage in storytelling as an integral part of the accomplishment of an institutional task. The corpora consist of video interactions collected throughout the semester; however, this chapter will focus on two online sessions in which there are several storytelling episodes. As our analysis will show, these stories are integral to the student-teachers’ completion of the assigned task. Specifically, the two women mutually negotiate online the ‘business at hand’ in an out-of-class meeting: discussing materials development for classroom implementation. While the range of topics of the storytelling is wide, the student–teachers are not off-task; the storytelling actually supports the progressivity of the task. In applying a conversation analysis perspective, we identify how storytelling episodes are woven into the unfolding social accomplishment of the institutionally assigned tasks. It will be argued that the storytelling episodes help the participants deflect responsibility for incomplete tasks and justify ‘teacher-based’ decisions through displays of their epistemic stance. By weaving personal experiences into the social action of completing a university assignment, the two student–teachers create connections which display mutual affiliation during their online collaboration.

Notes