Walton’s types of argumentation dialogues as classroom discourse sequences
Walton’s types of argumentation dialogues as classroom discourse sequences
Dialogic argumentation has thus far been proposed as a way to analyse, understand, and promote meaningful classroom interactions. However, currently there is a lack of systematic proposals for conceptualising argumentation dialogue goals as part of teachers’ pedagogical repertoire. Our main goal is to operationalise an existing framework of argumentation dialogue types, the one proposed by argumentation theorist Douglas Walton. To do so, we first identify a set of epistemic criteria for meaningful, from an argumentation point of view, discursive interactions, which we use as ‘framing indicators’ to enrich Walton’s existing typology of four argumentation dialogues (information-seeking, inquiry, discovery, persuasion). We applied the resulting pragmatic framework to teacher-student interactions found in 20 transcripts of both science and social sciences secondary education lessons. We found that affordances for these four types of dialogues were also present in teacher-student discourse, where the implied argumentation goal was not fulfilled. We discuss these findings in terms of the need to be able to identify the dialogic potentiality and accountability within teacher-student interactions so that the argumentative potential of these interactions can be fulfilled, resulting in productive classroom discourse within secondary education classroom settings.
Argumentation, classroom discourse, teacher-student interaction, dialogue types
Rapanta, Chrysi
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Christodoulou, Andri
0a97820c-7e87-45d6-827a-d72fa1734d0a
Rapanta, Chrysi
e7f2c8cd-fa68-4835-8dea-211287cc7ef1
Christodoulou, Andri
0a97820c-7e87-45d6-827a-d72fa1734d0a
Rapanta, Chrysi and Christodoulou, Andri
(2019)
Walton’s types of argumentation dialogues as classroom discourse sequences.
Learning, Culture and Social Interaction, 0, [100352].
(doi:10.1016/j.lcsi.2019.100352).
Abstract
Dialogic argumentation has thus far been proposed as a way to analyse, understand, and promote meaningful classroom interactions. However, currently there is a lack of systematic proposals for conceptualising argumentation dialogue goals as part of teachers’ pedagogical repertoire. Our main goal is to operationalise an existing framework of argumentation dialogue types, the one proposed by argumentation theorist Douglas Walton. To do so, we first identify a set of epistemic criteria for meaningful, from an argumentation point of view, discursive interactions, which we use as ‘framing indicators’ to enrich Walton’s existing typology of four argumentation dialogues (information-seeking, inquiry, discovery, persuasion). We applied the resulting pragmatic framework to teacher-student interactions found in 20 transcripts of both science and social sciences secondary education lessons. We found that affordances for these four types of dialogues were also present in teacher-student discourse, where the implied argumentation goal was not fulfilled. We discuss these findings in terms of the need to be able to identify the dialogic potentiality and accountability within teacher-student interactions so that the argumentative potential of these interactions can be fulfilled, resulting in productive classroom discourse within secondary education classroom settings.
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Accepted/In Press date: 7 October 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 October 2019
Keywords:
Argumentation, classroom discourse, teacher-student interaction, dialogue types
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Local EPrints ID: 435753
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/435753
ISSN: 2210-6561
PURE UUID: 615d0f0b-9507-45d2-b5fd-2d2fbcd6607b
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Date deposited: 19 Nov 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:26
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Author:
Chrysi Rapanta
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