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Title: EDUC2029: Week 10


1
EDUC2029 Week 10
  • The Construction of Students in the Classroom

2
Anticipatory Set
  • Wepins by Gregory
  •  Ther are mny kds uv wepins ther are had grnad
    shotrs bazuks flame thrs an mines if you rnt
    carefull they can kil the gy that has thm if you
    pull a pen on the grana you hav to thrw it quk or
    it will blooenup in yr had
  •  There are many kinds of weapons there are hand
    grenade shooters bazookers flame throwers and
    mines if you arent careful they can kill the guy
    that has them if you pull a pin on the grenade
    you have to throw it quick or it will blow up in
    your hand
  •  Activity What advice would you give to this
    student?

3
Aims
  • Review content from Week 9
  • Practise analysing classroom discourse
  • Examine how being a student is constructed in
    classrooms
  • Consider the complexities of making decisions
    about good and bad teaching

4
Outline of Lecture
  • Review Week 9
  • Construction of the good student
  • Conclusion

5
Review of Week 9
6
A functional model of language
7
The Construction of Students in the Classroom
8
From Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets,
pp72-73
  • Professor Sprout was standing behind a trestle
    bench in the centre of the greenhouse. About
    twenty pairs of different coloured earmuffs were
    lying on the bench. When Harry had taken his
    place between Ron and Hermione, she said, Well
    be re-potting Mandrakes today. Now, who can tell
    me the properties of the Mandrake?
  • To nobodys surprise, Hermiones hand was first
    in the air.
  • Mandrake, or Mandragora, is a powerful
    restorative, said Hermione, sounding as usual as
    though she had swallowed the textbook. It is
    used to return people who have been transfigured
    or cursed to their original state.
  • Excellent. Ten points to Gryffindor, said
    Professor Sprout. The Mandrake forms an
    essential part of most antidotes. It is also,
    however, dangerous. Who can tell me why?
  • Hermiones hand narrowly missed Harrys glasses
    as it shot up again.
  • The cry of the Mandrake is fatal to anyone who
    hears it, she said promptly.
  • Precisely. Take another ten points, said
    Professor Sprout. Now, the Mandrakes we have
    here are still very young.

9
Being a student
  • Messages for Hermione?
  • Messages for other students?
  • What does it mean to be a good student in this
    classroom?

10
Wepins by Gregory
  •  Ther are mny kds uv wepins ther are had grnad
    shotrs bazuks flame thrs an mines if you rnt
    carefull they can kil the gy that has thm if you
    pull a pen on the grana you hav to thrw it quk or
    it will blooenup in yr had
  •  There are many kinds of weapons there are hand
    grenade shooters bazookers flame throwers and
    mines if you arent careful they can kill the guy
    that has them if you pull a pin on the grenade
    you have to throw it quick or it will blow up in
    your hand
  • What did the teacher say?

11
  • Conference 1 (40 seconds)
  • Teacher How is it going Greg?
  • Greg Good.
  • Teacher Tell me about it.
  • Greg Well, these weapons will kill you if you
    dont look out. Some guys forget when they pull
    the pin and stand there like dopes. It just
    blows their heads off. What a mess! Other guys
    get killed too.
  • Teacher I see. You do have to watch out for that
    dont you? And what will you be doing with this
    piece next?
  • Greg Well, they used these to kill Germans and I
    want to put that in.
  • Teacher Fine, go to it.

12
  • Conference 1 (40 seconds)
  • Teacher How is it going Greg?
  • Greg Good.
  • Teacher Tell me about it.
  • Greg Well, these weapons will kill you if you
    dont look out. Some guys forget when they pull
    the pin and stand there like dopes. It just blows
    their heads off. What a mess! Other guys get
    killed too.
  • Teacher I see. You do have to watch out for that
    dont you? And what will you be doing with this
    piece next?
  • Greg Well, they used these to kill Germans and I
    want to put that in.
  • Teacher Fine, go to it.
  • Genre and purpose?
  • Field What are they talking about?
  • Tenor Who is talking to whom? Power, distance,
    affect?
  • Mode/s What type of language is being used
    verbal, spoken, visual, audio, gestural, spatial?
  • Ideology What is being valued about literacy,
    subject matter?

13
  • Conference 1 (40 seconds)
  • Teacher How is it going Greg?
  • Greg Good.
  • Teacher Tell me about it.
  • Greg Well, these weapons will kill you if you
    dont look out. Some guys forget when they pull
    the pin and stand there like dopes. It just blows
    their heads off. What a mess! Other guys get
    killed too.
  • Teacher I see. You do have to watch out for that
    dont you? And what will you be doing with this
    piece next?
  • Greg Well, they used these to kill Germans and I
    want to put that in.
  • Teacher Fine, go to it.
  • Who is the primary knower? The secondary knower?
  • Who has control?
  • What evaluation would you make of this
    interaction?
  • What are the strengths and limitations of these
    questions?

14
Girls into concrete by John, Year 3 (in Kamler,
1997)
  • This potion will turn girls into concreate
  • Ingredience
  • 1 kg of concreate
  • 2 girls
  • 1 eye from a bat
  • Method
  • tip 1 kg of concreate into tub
  • drop eye into concreate in tub
  • put girls into concreate. make sure that girls
    are sitting up right
  • Note
  • This potion will not work if add to much
    concreate

15
Girls into concrete by John, Year 3 (in Kamler,
1997)
  • (Female) Teachers comment
  • While I would classify text 2 as a complete
    instructional procedural genre, it would have
    been even better with a concluding step after
    step 3 of the method e.g., (4) When concrete
    girls have set can be used as ornaments in home
    or garden.
  • What counts as being a good student in this
    classroom? (Think about the overt and covert
    messages!)

16
Girls into concrete by John, Year 3 (in Kamler,
1997)
  • This potion will turn girls into concreate
  • Ingredience
  • 1 kg of concreate
  • 2 girls
  • 1 eye from a bat
  • Method
  • tip 1 kg of concreate into tub
  • drop eye into concreate in tub
  • put girls into concreate. make sure that girls
    are sitting up right
  • Note This potion will not work if add to much
    concreate
  • In what ways does this text (and the teachers
    response) reflect the many intersecting and
    simultaneous functions of schooling
  • Pastoral
  • Skilling
  • Regulative
  • Human-capital
  • Individual expression
  • Cultural-heritage
  • Democratic

17
Austen et. al. (2003)
  • Each function of schooling has implications for
    what constitutes the special knowledge that
    relates to schooling for teachers, teacher
    educators and parents (Keogh 1999) and each
    embodies a particular Child of the Curriculum
    the supported Child, the Child skilled and
    regulated for vocational life, the Child
    performing up to standards, the self-expressing
    Child, the democratic-citizen Child and so on
    Contests over priorities have never been resolved
    in any final sense, each cyclically invoking its
    opponents, simply because all these functions
    reflect what communities have come to expect of
    schooling.

18
Wepins by Gregory
  • Competing positions re the purposes of schooling
  • Traditionalism the transmission of the cultures
    heritage
  • Progessivism education is about personal growth
  • Transformationalism educational experiences are
    arenas through which to transform students and
    society
  • What is evident in the teachers talk around this
    text?
  •  Ther are mny kds uv wepins ther are had grnad
    shotrs bazuks flame thrs an mines if you rnt
    carefull they can kil the gy that has thm if you
    pull a pen on the grana you hav to thrw it quk or
    it will blooenup in yr had
  •  There are many kinds of weapons there are hand
    grenade shooters bazookers flame throwers and
    mines if you arent careful they can kill the guy
    that has them if you pull a pin on the grenade
    you have to throw it quick or it will blow up in
    your hand

19
  • Conference 1 (40 seconds)
  • Teacher How is it going Greg?
  • Greg Good.
  • Teacher Tell me about it.
  • Greg Well, these weapons will kill you if you
    dont look out. Some guys forget when they pull
    the pin and stand there like dopes. It just blows
    their heads off. What a mess! Other guys get
    killed too.
  • Teacher I see. You do have to watch out for that
    dont you? And what will you be doing with this
    piece next?
  • Greg Well, they used these to kill Germans and I
    want to put that in.
  • Teacher Fine, go to it.
  • Competing positions re the purposes of schooling
  • Traditionalism the transmission of the cultures
    heritage
  • Progessivism education is about personal growth
  • Transformationalism educational experiences are
    arenas through which to transform students and
    society
  • What is evident in the teachers talk around this
    text?

20
A return to traditionalism?
  • The shape of things to come?
  • P (prepare)
  • I (identify)
  • E (elaborate)

21
Students become the teacher expectations
  • See the Austen, Dwyer, Freebody reading for the
    detail.
  • Story Peter Freebody and Jill Freiberg working
    with teachers in a Disadvantaged school the
    dumbest kid in the school

22
Vygotsky (see Dufficy 2005)
  • Zone of Proximal Development
  • Role of emotion in learning and development
    (Damasios description of the man with steel
    through his frontal lobe) bringing together
    heart and head
  • if we intend to challenge children and young
    people productively, then trust, honesty and
    authenticity must be the bedrock of our
    interactions. (p66)

23
From Dufficy, 2005, p72
  • Chau But Sir, how about if people are angry
    inside but in the outside they cant really say
    it out?
  • T Yes, and so theyDo you think its good to
    hold in your anger?
  • Hassan No.
  • Ss No.
  • T No, you reckon you should express your anger.
  • Hassan Because otherwise you get a headache.
  • T You get headaches if you hold it in. Have you
    ever been in situations where youve had to hold
    in your anger?

24
  • Ss Yeah.
  • T When, Hai?
  • Hai Last year.
  • T What happened?
  • Hai Like Phuong, Salam and George
  • T What?
  • Hai I had a fight down there.
  • T And you had to hold in your anger.
  • Mark Yeah, I was there too. I was watching.
  • T Sometimeswhats
  • Chau ()

25
  • T Sorry, Chau, I interrupted you.
  • Chau You go.
  • T No, you go.
  • Chau No you.
  • T I forgot what I was going to say. Doesnt
    matter ()
  • How does this combine elements of head and
    heart teaching?
  • Who are the primary and secondary knowers here?

26
CompareAnstey 2004
  • Mary (reading from her written piece) When we
    heard about my pa died, my mum started to cry and
    we all did too. It was really sad and we couldnt
    cheer my mum up. We tried but we just couldnt
    cheer my mum up, and he was really good to us. He
    gave us lollies.
  • Anstey Your pa died?
  • Mary Yeah.
  • Anstey (pointing to unfinished word in writing)
    Are you going to finish the word lollies?

27
  • Mary He ate some too, but in hospital he didnt
    eat any food, thats why he was(pause)he died.
  • Anstey He was very sick was he? Are you going to
    put that into your story?
  • Mary (shakes head) No, not very much room.
  • Anstey You can use another piece of paper if you
    want to?
  • Mary No.
  • Questions
  • What are the message/s here about being a good
    student?
  • What could the teacher have done differently?

28
SoDufficy 2005
  • it could be said that the story of a classroom
    is told through its talk. While restricted
    patterns of communication afford little
    opportunity to develop both linguistically and
    cognitively, they also frame for the child the
    kind of learner she is considered to be. This
    learner is one that doesnt initiate topics for
    consideration by others is restricted in the
    opportunity to question and disagree and is
    contrained to the extent that she must pursue the
    answer demanded by others. At least initially,
    children are learning values of compliance,
    cognitive passivity, and uncritical acceptance of
    the views of others.

29
  • teachers must continue to take children and
    young people, as active partners, on excursions
    into the world. The quality of the excursions
    might well be judged by the nature of the
    interactions that take place and these, in turn,
    should be judged on the values and dispositions
    that children are assisted to learn.

30
Conclusion
31
Todays Tutorial
  • Questions
  • Where do you stand traditionalism,
    progressivism, transformationalism?
  • Analysing classroom discourse

32
References
  • Anstey, M. and Bull, G. (2004). The literacy
    labyrinth second edition. Pearson Prentice Hall
    Frenchs Forest NSW.
  • Austin, H., Dwyer, B., Freebody, P. (2003).
    Schooling the child The making of students in
    classrooms. Routledge Falmer London.
  • Dufficy, P. (2005). Becoming in classroom talk.
    Prospect. 201. pp59-81.
  • Graves, D. (1983). Writing Teachers and children
    at work. Heinemann London.
  • Kamler, Barbara (1997). Towards a critical
    writing pedagogy in English. Muspratt, S, Luke,
    A. and Freebody, P. Constructing critical
    literacies. Allen Unwin Australia.
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