Balaman2025

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Balaman2025
BibType ARTICLE
Key Balaman2025
Author(s) Ufuk Balaman
Title Pre-service language teachers’ collaborative management of the shared video-mediated interactional space for pedagogical task design
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Conversation analysis, Language teacher education, Video-mediated interaction, Task design, Digital literacy, Telecollaboration
Publisher
Year 2025
Language English
City
Month
Journal Linguistics and Education
Volume 86
Number April 2025
Pages 101394
URL Link
DOI 10.1016/j.linged.2025.101394
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Digital literacy practices in multimodal interactional spaces, including video-mediated settings, are largely being recognized as a rich domain of research inquiry in pre-service language teacher education. This study presents findings from a telecollaborative partnership project in which small groups of pre-service language teachers collaboratively design, receive feedback for, implement, and reflect on telecollaborative tasks in and through video-mediated interactions. Using multimodal conversation analysis as the research methodology, the study describes on a micro-longitudinal basis how the collaborative design processes on an online task design tool, the DigiTask web app, create opportunities for pre-service teachers’ exploration of the technological affordances of video-mediated interaction while also interactionally managing the complex pedagogical, social interactional, and digital literacy practices in situ. More specifically, this study shows how pre-service teachers’ collaborative design-relevant actions facilitate the emergence of a digital literacy practice (i.e., shared control of a shared screen). Following the emergence of the practice, the teacher educator introduces the data-led evidence for the emergent practice in a large group video-mediated teacher education classroom, thus multiplying the practice within the larger scope of the project. The findings bring new insights into pre-service language teacher education and video-mediated interactions.

Notes