Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
366261 Linguistics and Education 2013 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

This paper reports findings derived from a qualitative research study focused on seven English teachers at a hyperdiverse high school as they learned to analyze their classroom talk for moments of conflict. Using methods derived from interactional ethnography and systemic functional linguistics, the author analyzes the ways that one teacher uses a “heroic White teacher” text, LouAnne Johnson's autobiographical novel Dangerous Minds, to talk about the societal significance of “the n-word” with her students, attempting to navigating ideological dilemmas of race and difference in her discourse. The study ends by calling for further description, analysis, and careful consideration of the culturally responsive discourse and interaction of teachers from all backgrounds, which can be useful for helping researchers, teacher educators, and policymakers understand how identities and social subjectivities are negotiated in and through talk and action.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities Language and Linguistics
Authors
,