Greenhalgh2021

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Greenhalgh2021
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Greenhalgh2021
Author(s) Emma Greenhalgh, Ray Wilkinson
Title Storytelling in a Meaning-and-Fluency Task in the Second Language Classroom
Editor(s) Jean Wong, Hansun Zhang Waring
Tag(s) EMCA
Publisher Routledge
Year 2021
Language English
City New York
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 162–182
URL Link
DOI 10.4324/9780429029240-11
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Storytelling in Multilingual Interaction: A Conversation Analysis Perspective
Chapter

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Abstract

In this chapter we examine storytelling sequences elicited from L2 students in a meaning-and-fluency classroom activity. The data consist of video recordings of an adult L2 English class in the UK. The teacher is a first language (L1) English speaker, and there are three students (one Spanish L1, two Arabic L1). Our observations relate to (1) the elicitation of the story, (2) its (co-)telling and (3) its receipt. We note first that these stories are always produced as a response to a question prompt from an L2 teaching resource book. Second, we explore how this launch – and the overarching pedagogic activity – can affect the internal construction of the story, particularly in the form of co-construction by the teacher. Third, we note that when receipting the story, the L2 teacher tends to focus on alignment and understanding checks (e.g., in the form of assessments and/or continuers) rather than affiliation with the teller as is often the case in everyday conversation. We thus show that while meaning-and-fluency tasks, such as the one analyzed here, may aim to encourage conversational forms of interaction between participants, institutional – specifically pedagogical – features of interaction may still be evident.

Notes