Developing an Understanding of the Mediating Role of Talk in the Elementary Mathematics Classroom

Bibliographic Details
Title: Developing an Understanding of the Mediating Role of Talk in the Elementary Mathematics Classroom
Language: English
Authors: Brown, Raymond, Hirst, Elizabeth, Houston Univ., TX. Coll. of Education.
Source: Journal of Classroom Interaction. 2007 41(2):18-28.
Availability: University of Houston, College of Education. 442 Farish Hall, Houston, TX 77204-5026. Web site: http://cmcd.coe.uh.edu/coejci/index.html
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 11
Publication Date: 2007
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Evaluative
Education Level: Elementary Education
Grade 1
Grade 2
Grade 4
Grade 5
Grade 7
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Student Participation, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Mathematics, Thinking Skills, Foreign Countries, Social Influences, Cultural Influences
Geographic Terms: Australia
ISSN: 0749-4025
Abstract: Classroom talk is regarded as essential in engaging and developing student understandings in the domain of mathematics. The processes of classroom talk may occur in quite different ways, ways that shape particular opportunities for learning mathematics. Little is known about how the talk produced in innovative approaches to education mediates the teaching/learning process and promotes student engagement in the practices of mathematics. Situated within a larger study that employed multiple forms of data collection to determine whether a sociocultural approach to teaching and learning could be employed by a sample of teachers to enrich the teaching and learning of mathematics, this paper examines how two teachers used talk to scaffold student learning and how this talk provided students with different opportunities for learning. In the analyses of talk produced in Year 7 classrooms we use Renshaw and Brown's (in press) discourse characterizations to make visible how different forms of talk were being used in the classrooms as thinking devices and as means to explain and generate understanding. We also employ Bakhtin's notion of "voice" to consider whether the formats of talk used in each classroom facilitate learning in the domain of mathematics. We conclude that the intentional and reflective use of classroom talk affords students a range of opportunities to develop their mathematical thinking and to facilitate engagement with the practices of mathematics. (Contains 2 figures.)
Abstractor: Author
Number of References: 29
Entry Date: 2007
Access URL: https://www.coe.uh.edu/cmcd/coejci/issues/vol41no2.htm
Accession Number: EJ780289
Database: ERIC
More Details
ISSN:0749-4025
Published in:Journal of Classroom Interaction
Language:English