Abstract

In this paper we propose that Interaction Analysis studies, which focus on the process‐product relationship between types of teacher–student interactions and learning outcomes, present only part of the learning picture. Clearly, not all teacher–student interaction patterns are equally effective for students at different ages and stages of development. We describe how Interaction Content Analysis was used within the framework of a distance‐learning (DL) project in order to clarify the complex roles and relationships between individual learners’ needs and expectations, types of interactions and learning outcomes. In our project, two differentiated teaching roles emerged—the role of the university‐based lecturer who transmitted subject content and the role of the local site‐based teacher who supported students in their classrooms. We describe how those roles supplemented each other in order to improve learning in a DL environment. We show how content analysis of teacher–student interactions used by universit...

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