Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/13078
Appears in Collections:Literature and Languages Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: University students managing engagement, preparation, knowledge and achievement: Interactional evidence from institutional, domestic and virtual settings
Author(s): Stokoe, Elizabeth
Benwell, Bethan
Attenborough, Frederick
Contact Email: b.m.benwell@stir.ac.uk
Keywords: University students
Conversation analysis
Student experience
Knowledge
Tutorials
Issue Date: Jun-2013
Date Deposited: 27-May-2013
Citation: Stokoe E, Benwell B & Attenborough F (2013) University students managing engagement, preparation, knowledge and achievement: Interactional evidence from institutional, domestic and virtual settings. Learning, Culture and Social Interaction, 2 (2), pp. 75-90. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lcsi.2013.01.001
Abstract: How do university students engage with each other in the domestic and institutional settings of their lives? While little is known about the dynamics of university versus school classrooms, even less is known about other academic and non-academic environments in which students engage in educational matters. To explore this empirical ‘black-box', conversation analysis was used to analyze a large corpus of audio- and video-recordings of students in tutorials, at home watching television, in a university corridor, and interacting online, as well as through the marginalia written in library textbooks. The analysis focused on the sequential organization of students' orientations to university work and educational activities. We show that, across the data, students minimized or ironized their preparation for and engagement with academic tasks. We also identified patterns in the organization of students' assessments of their own and each other's knowledge and achievements. Overt displays of competence were downgraded or denied. We discuss these findings in the context of cultural trends in education discourse and the interactional constraints against ‘showing off' and ‘self-praise'. We conclude that our multi-setting qualitative methods afford, in particular ways, the generation of knowledge of students' lives, as well as a basis for developing practice and application.
DOI Link: 10.1016/j.lcsi.2013.01.001
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