Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
357270 International Journal of Educational Research 2007 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper explores the social positions that students construct and the patterns of participation that different individuals and groups achieve within a classroom community of practice. Using a form of collective argumentation to promote student involvement in the practices of a disciplinary community of mathematicians, the study employed a participant-observation design to explore Year 7 students’ ‘talk about’ and ‘talk within’ a classroom community. Through examining ‘talk about’, as evidenced in journal writings, and ‘talk within’, as displayed in a group presentation, one female student's journey towards more mature ways of participating in her classroom community is tracked and discussed. The student, Cath, is a high-achieving student who attends a primary school located near the centre of a capital city in Australia. Cath's Year 7 class is made up of 26 (11–12-year old) male and female students. The study found that as a student moves towards greater levels of participation in the classroom community, he/she may construct social positions that are marked by changing relationships between themselves and the discipline of mathematics. The study found also, that the cultural resources of a mathematical community, such as norms of participation, are important rudiments of long-term change in the social positions that students construct. Findings are presented in a manner that demonstrates how sociocultural theory may function to inform and describe student participation in classroom learning.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Social Sciences Education
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