Waring2005a

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Waring2005a
BibType ARTICLE
Key Waring2005a
Author(s) Hansun Zhang Waring
Title Peer tutoring in a graduate writing centre: identity, expertise, and advice resisting
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Tutors, Tutoring, Peer Teaching, Graduate Students, Writing (Composition), Academic Discourse, Discourse Analysis, Writing Instruction, Interpersonal Relationship
Publisher
Year 2005
Language English
City
Month
Journal Applied Linguistics
Volume 26
Number 2
Pages 141–168
URL Link
DOI 10.1093/applin/amh041
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Compared to research on the giving of advice (e.g. Hutchby 1995), relatively less work has been conducted on the receiving or resisting of advice, where the interactionally problematic nature of advising is crystallized (e.g. Heritage and Sefi 1992). Moreover, the notion of advising in education settings has predominantly concerned procedural matters such as planning course schedules (e. g. He 1993). The purpose of this paper is to describe how advice resisting is accomplished in "peer tutoring" in a graduate writing centre. Peer tutoring constitutes a privileged site for observing the complexities of advising episodes. Tutoring sessions between a tutor and a graduate student have been audio-taped and transcribed in detail. Using the methodology of conversation analysis, I show how the tutee resists the tutor's advice on general academic writing issues, content-related matters, or the mechanics of writing. I argue that the pattern of resistance can be accounted for by the tutee's identity claim as well as the competing expertise carried by the tutor and the tutee.

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