McHoul1978

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McHoul1978
BibType ARTICLE
Key McHoul1978
Author(s) Alec McHoul
Title The organization of turns at formal talk in the classroom
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Configuration and distance in interaction, conversation analysis, turn-taking systems, classroom language, sociology of education, British and Australian English
Publisher
Year 1978
Language English
City
Month
Journal Language in Society
Volume 7
Number 2
Pages 183–213
URL Link
DOI 10.1017/S0047404500005522
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Beginning with a consideration of some commonsense and professional conceptions of what a formal situation might comprise, this paper goes on to ask the question: where along a linear array which has its poles in exemplars of formal and informal speech-exchange systems, can classroom talk be placed? Its answer is given in part in the form of rules for the taking of turns in classrooms, these being modifications of those, already established in the literature, for natural conversation. These rules allow for and require that formal classroom situations be constructed so as to involve differential participation rights for parties to the talk depending on their membership of the social identity-class ‘student/teacher’. The analyses which follow examine some of the applications and violations of these rules found in audio and video recordings of naturally occurring classroom talk (and transcripts thereof) for their orderliness as orientations to these rules. It is argued that the rules provide a systematic basis for the ‘feelings’ of ‘formality’ that researchers and participants have of such situations and that a decision as to the ‘formality’ or otherwise of a social situation can be predicated on the degree of pre-allocation involved in the organization of turns at talk in the situation.

Notes