Search results

Jump to: navigation, search
  • ...focus group data against the grain involves paying attention both to wider social power relations, as is crucial to a poststructuralist discourse analysis, a
    2 KB (257 words) - 02:08, 12 January 2023
  • |Journal=Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research ...which passers-by walk around and between the performers as individuals and groups. The findings are supported with illustrations.
    1 KB (200 words) - 10:47, 30 November 2019
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; Data session; Focus Groups; Higher education; Research praxis |Journal=Learning, Culture and Social Interaction
    2 KB (254 words) - 02:40, 15 May 2018
  • ...hildren's groups in transnational and postcolonial settings; the moral and social orders of children; an increasing emphasis on the role of affect, embodimen
    2 KB (325 words) - 07:20, 5 August 2017
  • |Journal=Advances in Social Sciences Research ...unicative tasks during natural interactions, enhancing solidarity and good social relations among them.
    2 KB (221 words) - 13:16, 12 August 2017
  • ...nt cultural, national, or ethnic groups were engaged in different types of social activities; their diversity illustrates how the participants’ ascription
    2 KB (204 words) - 00:42, 18 November 2019
  • ...egitimate as well as subvert or resist racial and/or racist ideologies and social structures. ...parliamentary debates, academic texts, etc.), individual interviews, focus groups and group discussions, “naturally occurring” talk-in-interaction from c
    3 KB (387 words) - 20:18, 15 October 2017
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; Talk in activity; social organization; conversation analysis; |Abstract=This article explores how members of small work groups use audible and visible actions to coordinate conversational interaction. T
    1 KB (187 words) - 00:55, 27 October 2019
  • |Journal=Social Psychology Quarterly ...e) and turn-initial words (e.g., but, oh) in twenty-nine experimental task groups, taking turn-initial words as indicators of the type of content a speaker p
    1 KB (194 words) - 12:24, 25 November 2019
  • ...of conversation monitoring ability. The second study looking at three age groups (2;5 to 5;5) examines the development of this ability and investigates reas
    1 KB (167 words) - 10:06, 21 October 2019
  • |Title=Social Interaction in Temporary Gatherings: A Sociological Taxonomy of Groups and Crowds for Computer Vision Practitioners |Tag(s)=EMCA; Temporary gatherings; Groups; Crowds; Ethnomethodology; Computer vision;
    1 KB (197 words) - 05:07, 6 July 2018
  • |Tag(s)=Conversation Analysis; EMCA; Language use; Pragmatics; Social interaction; Turn taking ...uestions and their responses in spontaneous conversation among three-party groups of same age children between 4–8 years of age to investigate the frequenc
    2 KB (203 words) - 03:19, 11 January 2020
  • |Tag(s)=EMCA; contextualization cues; direct speech; focus groups; identity; language and body movement; transposition; ...licing outcomes. We begin by discussing the linguistic ideologies of focus groups and show how these presuppositions shape the interaction among focus group
    2 KB (233 words) - 02:15, 30 October 2019
  • ...point, children are also drawn to a prospective view of the present time, social organization, scientific progress, and the like. The depth of the discussio
    1 KB (164 words) - 02:06, 20 October 2019
  • ...conversation analysis, pedagogy and educational researchers. Professor of Social Interaction, Elizabeth Stokoe from Loughborough University, holds a Profess • A good social environment
    6 KB (846 words) - 10:41, 5 January 2018
  • |Title=Focus groups as social arenas for the negotiation of normativity |Tag(s)=EMCA; Focus Groups; Negotiations; Normativity; Chronic Illness; Discursive Psychology
    2 KB (261 words) - 17:02, 20 March 2020
  • |Journal=Research on Language and Social Interaction ...beyond gesture and gaze, body arrangements in interactional spaces, larger groups, material environments, mobile settings, silent activities, and animal enco
    2 KB (219 words) - 03:18, 11 January 2020
  • ...anguage games” and conversational “preferences” practiced by the two groups are responsive to different Interaction Orders, the “working consensus”
    1 KB (211 words) - 08:48, 11 June 2020
  • ...mment on Batel and Castro 'Re‐opening the dialogue between the theory of social representations and discursive psychology' |Journal=British Journal of Social Psychology
    1 KB (180 words) - 03:42, 16 January 2020
  • ...o language policies in urban China. It reveals that individuals and social groups of a language community can negotiate the Putonghua Policy through imposing
    4 KB (538 words) - 05:54, 13 January 2020

View (previous 20 | next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)