كليدواژه :
classroom discourse , display/referential questions , interaction features , monologic/dialogic patterns , IRF pattern , power dominance
چكيده لاتين :
Classroom discourse refers to the language and interaction used by
the teacher and the students to communicate and shape learning in
the educational context. The present study focused on Iranian EFL
teachers’ classroom discourse by observing their dominancy, teacher
talk, question types, and interactions in their classes. To do so,
through a non-experimental, descriptive research design, 20 female
experienced teachers with the age range of 30-40, teaching at an
upper-intermediate level in different language institutes in Isfahan,
Iran were selected based on the convenience sampling. Two classes
of the teachers were observed, the sessions were recorded, and their
classroom discourses were transcribed and later analyzed. Moreover,
to increase the validity and reliability of the research, a semistructured
interview was conducted with volunteer participants; their
reflections on their communication with the learners and discourse
types were collected and analyzed using descriptive statistics in
terms of frequency and percentages. The findings of the study
showed that the teachers made use of specific discourse to ascertain
their dominance and control in their classes. The findings also
revealed that the teachers used more monologic discourse patterns in
their classes rather than dialogic ones. Teacher talk far exceeded
student talk, Initiation-Response-Feedback pattern dominated the
classroom discourse; and display questions were used more
frequently than referential ones. These findings could benefit
teachers to be more conscious about type of CD and its effect on
student-to-student and teacher-to-student interactions. It could also
serve the purpose of critical classroom discourse analysis.