Abstract

Within the context of teacher/whole-class instruction sequences, researchers have associated teacher evaluation of pupils’ answers to forms of traditional pedagogic discourse, also referred to as ‘triadic dialogue’, ‘monologic discourse’, ‘recitation’ and ‘Initiation-Response-Evaluation (IRE) sequences’. Teacher evaluation has also been associated with pupils’ low levels of participation. Explanations and solutions offered by prior research are mainly based on functional categories of actions, characterizing forms and functions of teacher questions and follow-up moves in IRE sequences. Using Conversation Analysis to investigate collections of positive evaluations in video-recorded lessons in two primary school classes, we propose an interactional explanation of the phenomenon and of its predominant use. We show that teachers systematically select the formats of their positive third-turn receipts not only to evaluate pupils’ answers for their abstract truth value, but also with respect to the role of each question–answer in the whole activity. We demonstrate that, in this way, teachers convey judgements about the question within the activity; thus, adding a constitutive property to the pedagogic practice and providing students with interpretive resources for a common understanding of pedagogic goals and procedures.

Highlights

  • Teacher evaluation of pupils’ answers is one of the most complex, important and controversial issues in research on classroom interaction

  • Based on observations in an Italian primary school, we show that teachers use a restricted range of practices or techniques to indicate a positive evaluation of students’ prior answers

  • Using Conversation Analysis as our methodological perspective, first we identify and explore the practices most frequently used by teachers to evaluate student answers positively

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Summary

Affiliation

The corresponding author is responsible for ensuring that address and email details are correct for all the co-authors. Affiliations given in the article should be the affiliation at the time the research was conducted.

Introduction
Data and methods
Positive evaluation practices
Explicit positive evaluations
Full – verbatim and freestanding – repetitions of students’ answers
Embedded and accompanied repetitions
Direct transition to the next Q–A sequence
Positive evaluation practices and pedagogic activities10
Pedagogic activity II: questions developing a line of reasoning
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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