American Montessori Society : American Montessori Society Fall Conference
Irvine, California
October 12 – 14, 2007
Words @ Work in the Classroom : Words @ Work in the Classroom Josh Thompson, Ph.D.
Texas A&M University-Commerce
Words at Work in the Classroom : Words at Work in the Classroom An exploration of spoken language in the Montessori classroom environment. Listen in on the pragmatic nature of language: how do directors prepare the language environment to provide communicative competence, and how do children learn to use language to do things?
(Infants &Toddlers, Early Childhood)
Good Morning Songs : Good Morning Songs Good Morning to All (1893)
by Mildred J. Hill and Patty Smith Hill
Good Morning, Good Morning (1952)
from Singin’ in the Rain, by Brown & Freed
When Ducks Get up in the Morning
by Nancy Stewart www.nancymusic.com
Thank-you, Lord, for this fine day
Thanks : Thanks Thank-you, Maria Montessori
awaken my senses to the world around me
awaken my senses to the children around us
give me a place, a space, as a man in ECE
My childhood, my family
My mentors, teachers, friends, & colleagues
The Children
Turn to a neighbor, and express a thanks
Oral Language Development : Oral Language Development Foundations for literacy
Influence of home
Influence of classroom
Over-emphasis on literacy impedes oral language development (Dickinson & Tabors, 2002)
Turn to a neighbor, and express indignation!
Pragmatics : Pragmatics Language to do things
Linguistics overview : Linguistics overview Language is a system of rules for using symbols for sharing meaning
Linguistics overview : Linguistics overview Six rule systems
phonology
morphology
semantics
syntax
pragmatics
prosody
(Gunning, 2008)
Linguistics overview : Linguistics overview
Linguistics overview : Linguistics overview Five big ideas of early literacy instruction
phonemic awareness
phonics
vocabulary
comprehension
fluency
(National Reading Panel, 1999)
Pragmatic Development : Pragmatic Development Communicative Competence - Knowing when to speak, when not to, what to talk about and with whom, when, where, and in what manner to interact (Hymes, 1972) Pragmatic Development
Language Functions – using language in various contexts to do things (Cazden & Hymes, 1972)
Keep a Poem in Your Pocket : Keep a Poem in Your Pocket
Keep a Poem in Your Pocket : Keep a Poem in Your Pocket ti ti Ta ti ti ti ti
ti ti Ta ti ti ta
Keep a Poem in Your Pocket : Keep a Poem in Your Pocket Four Body Instruments
clap pat
stomp snap ti ti Ta ti ti ti ti
ti ti Ta ti ti ta
Keep a Poem in Your Pocket : Keep a Poem in Your Pocket Four Body Instruments
clap pat
stomp snap ti ti Ta ti ti ti ti
ti ti Ta ti ti ta Keep a poem in your pocket
And a song in your heart
And you’ll never be lonely
At home or in the dark (de Regniers)
Oral Language Research : Oral Language Research Classroom Discourse (Cazden 2001)
Home-School Language Study (Dickinson & Tabors 2001)
Micro-ethnography (Bloome, et al, 2005)
Labov, Hymes, Heath
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
Two Montessori, two public school
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
One 3-6 year old class, one 6-9 year old class, one Pre-kindergarten, one first grade
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
One male, three female teachers
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
Years of teaching experience = 2, 8, 22, 27; Average = 14.75
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
All monolingual English classrooms
20% - 57% Spanish dominant in the home
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
Five hours in each classroom
Audio and Video recording of teacher talk
Observer Effect
Transcriptions, marked by Speech Acts
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
Speech Act – seminal unit of discourse analysis (Hymes, 1972)
S.P.E.A.K.I.N.G. form identifies boundaries – what constitutes a unique speech act event
Slide25 : SPEAKING Observation Model Record Form
(Hymes, 1968; Wolfson, 1989; L. Thompson, 1996, W.J.Thompson, 2001)
Setting: Date: ____/____/___ Day: S M T W Th F S Time: __________A.M./P.M.
Place:
Physical circumstances:
Psychological setting:
Participants:
Speaker:
Addressor:
Audience:
Addressee:
Ends:
Purposes or Outcomes:
Goals:
Act Sequence:
Message form:
Message content:
Key:
Instrumentalities:
Channel:
Forms of Speech (codes, registers):
Norms:
Norms of interaction:
Norms of interpretation:
Genres: Categories:
Capturing Teacher Talk : Capturing Teacher Talk Listening in on four classrooms
Speech Acts
Range = 3 events per minute to one event in five minutes
Average = 100 per hour, 500 per day, 2500 per school, 10,000 total
Language functions : Language functions Using language in various contexts to do things
Jakobson
Hymes
Halliday
Tough
Five Language Functions : Five Language Functions Affection
Control
Information
Pedagogy
Social Exchange
(Baron 1990)
Five Language Functions : Five Language Functions Listening in on four classrooms
Affection
Control
Information
Pedagogy
Social Exchange
(Baron 1990)
Slide30 : What is language good for?
What good is language, anyway?
What makes language good?
What is good language?
What do you wonder about? Ask a question.
What language is good for.
Table Talk : Table Talk “To become competent conversationalists, children have to learn how to
Choose and introduce topics for talk
Respond appropriately
Tell a story
Develop an argument”
(Blum-Kulka, 1997, p. 3)
Table Talk : Table Talk Indeterminacy of Goals
Vocabulary Approximation
Extended Narrative
Metapragmatic Discourse
Non-immediate
De-contextualized
Table Talk : Table Talk
www.MealsTogether.com
www.TableTime.com
Table Talk : Table Talk “Ordinary conversations are, at least ostensibly, not goal oriented… ‘[T]alking is an end in itself.’”
(Blum-Kulka, 1997, p. 9)
Table Talk : Table Talk “Family dinners are also familial WE events shared with children; as such they may carry important intentional socialization functions ranging from table manners to socialization of family values.”
(Blum-Kulka, 1997, p. 9)
Table Talk : Table Talk “This built in tension between sociability and socialization further sets dinners apart from both ordinary conversations and public events and has important consequences for the thematic organization of dinner talk.”
(Blum-Kulka, 1997, p. 9)
Table Talk : Table Talk “Dinners, like ordinary conversation, allow members to engage in conversation for social enjoyment only, with no visible outcome; simultaneously, they may have crucial outcomes, especially with regard to socialization.”
(Blum-Kulka, 1997, p. 9)
Conclusion : Conclusion Children learn to speak because they want to connect. The drive for relationship is stronger than any internal or external mechanics of language. Providing children, in classrooms, with rich potent language partners holds promise for extending language well into literacy, and on into communicative competence.
Ancient Wisdom : Ancient Wisdom Not many of you should presume to be teachers, my brothers, because you know that we who teach will be judged more strictly.
Book of St. James, chapter 3, verse 1
Ancient Wisdom : Ancient Wisdom 2 We all stumble in many ways. If anyone is never at fault in what he says, he is a perfect man, able to keep his whole body in check. (NIV)
Book of St. James, chapter 3, verse 2
References : References Baron, N. S. (1990). Pigeon-birds and rhyming words: The role of parents in language learning. Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.
Bloome, D., Carter, S. P., Christian, B. M., Otto, S. & Shuart-Faris, N. (2005). Discourse analysis and the study of classroom language and literacy events – A microethnographic perspective. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers.
Blum-Kulka, S. (1997). Dinner Talk: Cultural Patterns of Sociability and Socialization in Family Discourse. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers.
Cazden, C. B. (2001). Classroom discourse: The language of teaching and learning (2nd ed.). Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Cazden, C. B., & Hymes, D. (1985). Language Functions in the Classroom. Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press.
Dickinson, D.K. (2003). Why We Must Improve Teacher-Child Conversations in Preschools and the Promise of Professional Development. In L. Girolametto & E. Weitzman (Eds.), Enhancing caregiver language facilitation in childcare settings (pp. 4-1 - 4-8). Toronto, Canada: The Hanen Institute.
Dickinson, D. K., & Tabors, P. O. (2001). Beginning literacy with language: Young children learning at home and school. Baltimore: Paul H. Brooks Publishing Co.
Dickinson, D. K., & Tabors, P. O. (March 2002). Fostering Language and Literacy in Classrooms and Homes, in Young Children, vol 57, no. 2, pp. 10-18.
Gunning, T. G. (2008). Creating Literacy Instruction for All Students (6th ed). NY: Pearson Education.
Hymes, D. (1972). On communicative competence. In J. B. Pride & J. Holmes (Eds.), Sociolinguistics (pp. 269-293). Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin.
National Reading Panel. (2000). Teaching Children to Read: Report of the National Reading Panel. Available online at http://www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/nrp/smallbook.cfm