Abstract

International students and direct entrants—those entering a higher year of a degree—often come from socio-economic or cultural backgrounds different from traditional students, and have different educational backgrounds. It is assumed such students need help with unfamiliar assessment tasks such as essays, reports, and so on, and many sources aim to help with these elements. Further assumptions are that dialogue helps, and that the words used in such dialogue will be understood similarly. Yet, if the assumed meanings of the words actually differ, then such dialogue is based on a false assumption; rather than genuine dialogue, what actually occurs is an exchange of monologic utterances. This article is a structured narrative of our ongoing research into how key assessment task words such as ‘discuss,’ ‘analyse,’ and ‘critically evaluate’ are understood differently in higher education. We describe how such differences are perpetuated through Martin Buber’s (1947) ideas of monologic utterances, and what we call ‘dialogues of non-discovery’. Here we detail a research-based approach to promote genuine and technical dialogue: what we call ‘dialogues of discovery.’ We first introduce a dialogue that led to the genesis of the study and theoretical context of our dialogues with the literature. We then detail our methods of data collection in a section of ‘dialogues of exploration’. We present our findings in the form of categorizations of the different elements underpinning people’s understandings of ‘the word.’ Our own categorizations of these elements encourage dialogue around the elements of language, culture, stakeholder, subject, weight, and development over time. This is an approach we term an ‘anti-glossary approach’ in that it is opposite to, and against, ‘fixing’ or ‘ossifying’ the language in a glossary. In the Bakhtinian tradition of ‘incompletedness,’ we conclude by encouraging readers to take and adapt our findings as an ‘anti-glossary’ approach to engage in genuine and technical dialogue with their students. In this way, we believe the quality and depth of student work can improve.

Highlights

  • Dialogues of Non-discovery and Dialogues of DiscoveryAt our UK institution, as with many UK institutions, many students either start their studies after a period of time away from education, or come from overseas

  • We approach this article as a narrative that aims to convey to readers our experiences of dialogues of discovery and of non-discovery in relation to helping students become familiar with key assessment task words

  • In the Bakhtinian tradition of dialogue never being completed (Bakhtin, 1981) we conclude by encouraging readers to take and adapt our findings and anti-glossary approach to engage in genuine and technical dialogue with their students

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Summary

Introduction

At our UK institution, as with many UK institutions, many students either start their studies after a period of time away from education, or come from overseas. Knowing that the academic advisor spoke Chinese was critical, as it provided the basis of the dialogue This dialogue revealed the existence of multiple linguistic and cultural understandings of assessment terms that could only be understood through dialogue that was genuine and technical (Buber, 1947) and where previous assumptions had been suspended (Bohm, 1996). These themes arose with mature UK direct entrant students who asked almost the same question: “What exactly is ‘discuss’ in this coursework?” This further showed us students’ active attempt to take personal (cf Stern & Backhouse, 2011) ownership of the word from its neutral space For us, these dialogues of discovery led us to question the whole discourse used for assessment at the level of the word. We believe the quality and depth of student work can improve

Theoretical Frame
Dialogues of discovery
Educational and literacy based
Linguistic based
Philosophical based
Data and Analysis
Culture and Language
Development over time
Is there a specific design consumer culture?
Full Text
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