Wissenskommunikation multimodal: Wie Museumsbesucher sich über eine Museumsvitrine verständigen

Fachsprache ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 122-144
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Kesselheim

In the present paper I will study conversations in front of museum showcases as a specific form of knowledge communication. After presenting my understanding of the concepts“knowledge communication” and “knowledge”, which are informed by conversation analysis, I will explore two characteristic aspects of the ‘showcase conversations’ by means of a number of detailed analyses of short extracts of these conversations. First, I will show how knowledge is interactively produced and made publicly visible, and second, how people use the complex multimodal environment of the showcase as a basis for their knowledge construction, and how they manage to ‘tie together’ different semiotic “modes” which are visible and readable in display cases. The analyses of this paper are based on a corpus collected in a paleontological museum. The conversations have been recorded in a kind of ‘field experiment’: Probands have been asked to watch a showcase together and to summarize its content. While doing so they were filmed.

2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (s4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ajit Singh

Abstract This article investigates action plans not as mental but as situated and observable activities in social interactions. I argue that projections and action plans can be understood as complex embodied practices through which actors prepare and coordinate further actions as part of a trajectory of a “communicative project”. “Projections” within ‘talk-in-interaction’ are a central topic of conversation analysis (CA), e.g. for the micro analysis of the organization of turn-taking or for the identification of turn-constructional units. Aside from former CA-studies on syntactic and prosodic features, current research using CA from a multimodal perspective shows how embodied resources, such as gestures, serve as “premonitory components” of communicative actions. Using video data of communications in sports training in trampolining, I will show how communicatively situated “embodied action plans” are applied within pre-enactments and instructions for the production of embodied knowledge. Pre-enactments not only serve the production of an ideal imagination to corporally produce intersubjectivity. Pre-enactments are also used temporally for the multimodal and visibly situating of embodied action plans, to which actors can coordinate and orientate their current and prospective communicative actions.


2011 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pentti Haddington

By drawing on methods used in conversation analysis and interactional linguistics this article discusses the interplay between grammar and social interaction. It investigates a reduplicate linguistic item in Finnish called the ‘joke-joke’ structure. It is shown that the structure is used in interactional sequences in which some prior turn can be understood to be ambiguous in meaning and to have been produced either seriously or non-seriously. Speakers use the ‘joke-joke’ structure, as a kind of metacomment, to shift from an implied serious stance to a non-serious position. In essence, they use the structure to recontextualize and make the prior position ambiguous retroactively. It can thus be considered as a specific form of repair. The structure predominantly occurs in teasing and overstatements. The use of the structure can be seen to reflect the participants’ mutual understanding of sociocultural values. The use of the reduplicate structure can also be seen to be functionally motivated: it can be produced quickly and it iconically intensifies the meaning of ‘joking’. The findings here also support previous findings that reduplicates are frequently used to display emotional states. Finally, this article shows that meanings and understandings frequently emerge and are negotiated in social interaction.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beyza Björkman

Abstract This paper focuses on the under-researched genre of PhD supervision meetings (but see Vehviläinen, Sanna. 2009a. Problems in the research problem: Critical feedback and resistance in academic supervision. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research 53[2]. 185–201; Vehviläinen, Sanna. 2009b. Student-initiated advice in academic supervision. Research on Language and Social Interaction 42[2]. 163–190; Björkman, Beyza. 2015. PhD supervisor–PhD student interactions in an English-medium Higher Education [HE] setting: Expressing disagreement. European Journal of Applied Linguistics 3[2]. 205–229; Björkman, Beyza. 2016. PhD adviser and student interactions as a spoken academic genre. In K. Hyland & P. Shaw [eds.], The Routledge handbook of English for Academic Purposes, 348–361. Oxon: Routledge; Björkman, Beyza. 2017. PhD supervision meetings in an English as a Lingua Franca [ELF] setting: Linguistic competence and content knowledge as neutralizers of institutional and academic power. Journal of English as a Lingua Franca 6[1]. 111–139) and investigates knowledge construction episodes in PhD students’ discussions with their supervisors on their co-authored papers. In these meetings, all supervisors and students use English as their lingua franca (ELF). Such supervision meetings are made up of “social negotiation” and “collaborative sense-making,” providing a good base for learning to take place (Vygotsky, L. S. 1978. Mind in society: The development of higher psychological processes. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press), which in the present context is the “enculturation” of the PhD student into the research community (Manathunga, Catherine. 2014. Intercultural postgraduate supervision: Reimagining time, place and knowledge. New York: Routledge). It is precisely these negotiation and collaborative sense-making practices that the present paper focuses on, in order to investigate knowledge construction practices. While there is an abundance of research in disciplinary knowledge construction and academic literacy practices from cognitive and behavioral sciences, knowledge about novice scholars’ knowledge construction practices is scant in applied linguistics (but see Li, Yongyan. 2006. Negotiating knowledge contribution to multiple discourse communities: A doctoral student of computer science writing for publication. Journal of Second Language Writing 15[3]. 159–178). Even less is known about how PhD students may negotiate knowledge construction and engage in meaning-making practices in interaction with their supervisors. The material comprises 11 hours of naturally occurring speech by three supervisors and their students where they discuss the reviewers’ comments they have received from the journal. The predominant method employed here is applied conversation analysis (CA) (Richards, Keith & Paul Seedhouse [eds.]. 2005. Applying conversation analysis. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan), which includes both local patterns of interaction as well as “the tensions between [these] local practices and any ‘larger structures’ in which these are embedded, such as conventional membership categories, institutional rules, instructions, accounting obligations, etc.” (Have, Paul ten. 2007. Doing conversation analysis. London: Sage 199). The analyses here aim to show how the PhD supervisors and students discuss the reviewers’ comments with reference to (i) their own disciplinary community of climate science, and (ii) the domestic discourse community of the target journals (see also Li, Yongyan. 2006. Negotiating knowledge contribution to multiple discourse communities: A doctoral student of computer science writing for publication. Journal of Second Language Writing 15[3]. 159–178). The preliminary findings of the analyses show a tendency by the PhD students to focus more heavily on the domestic discourse community of the target journals, especially when justifying their methodological choices. The PhD supervisors, on the other hand, base their meaning-making on the conventions of the disciplinary community of climate science, pointing out broader disciplinary community practices. These findings, highlighting a need to focus on novice scholars’ meaning-making efforts, can be used to inform PhD supervision in general.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-80
Author(s):  
Amalia Saleh

Abstrak Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk memahami secara komprehensif nilai-nilai pendidikan multikultural dari James Banks dalam film "Entre les Murs". Penelitian kualitatif ini menggunakan analisis percakapan. Analisis dan interpretasi data menunjukkan bahwa: (1) integrasi isi ditunjukkan dalam film melalui diskusi antar guru, bukan dari kurikulum sekolah; (2) proses konstruksi ilmu pengetahuan ditunjukkan dari metode mengajar; (3) pedagogik kesetaraan antar manusia ditunjukkan dari sikap guru yang memberikan kesempatan bagi siswanya untuk meningkatkan rasa kepercayaan diri, memotivasi siswa, dan memberikan ilmu yang sama tanpa memandang etnis; (4) pengurangan prasangka terlihat dari tingkah laku positif seperti interaksi interpersonal dari para siswa yang menunjukkan usaha untuk mengurangi prasangka, walaupun masih ada prasangka negatif yang terlihat; dan (5) pemberdayaan kebudayaan sekolah terlihat dari program sekolah yang memungkinkan adanya keterlibatan seluruh perangkat sekolah seperti kepala sekolah, guru, siswa, dan orangtua siswa. Kata Kunci: Analisis percakapan, film, multikultural, pendidikan multikultural Abstract The objective of this research is to understand comprehensively the values of multicultural education from James Banks on the film "Entre les Murs". This qualitative research uses conversation analysis. The data analysis and interpretation indicates (1) content integration is shown on the film from the discussions between the teacher; (2) knowledge construction process is shown from the teaching method; (3) equity pedagogy is shown from the teachers who provide opportunities for students to boost their confidence, motivate students, and provide the same education regardless of ethnicity; (4) prejudice reduction is shown in interpersonal interactions between students that indicate an effort of prejudice reduction such as helping each other, even though the negative prejudicefrom the teachers and the students are still shown; (5) empowering school culture and social structure is shown from school programs that enable the involvement of all school stakeholders. Keywords: Conversation analysis, multicultural, multicultural education.


2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia Levashina ◽  
Frederick P. Morgeson ◽  
Michael A. Campion

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
Svin Deneckere ◽  
Martin Euwema ◽  
Cathy Lodewijckx ◽  
Massimiliano Panella ◽  
Walter Sermeus ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document