Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
373293 System 2007 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

Second language tasks are often described as classroom activities that promote greater student participation, yet many studies only discuss participation in aggregates, such as total turns at talk or total words per turn. The aim here is to demonstrate that a qualitative inquiry into tasks can equally reveal important participatory and interactional implications for the language teacher. Specifically, this study investigates the interactional role participatory structures of tasks have on floor management. Participatory structures determine how interlocutors participate in tasks, and include concepts such as one-way and two-way interaction. Floor management can be described as interlocutors’ attempt to move the task forward. The findings show that the way information is distributed between interlocutors affects floor management. For example, if one interlocutor is describing a picture to another interlocutor that cannot see the picture, the interlocutor with the picture will anchor the floor according to what the picture looks like. When discussing shared information, the direction of the floor is determined by both interlocutors’ understanding of how the task should be completed.

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