Hello ITAIS! My name is Elizabeth Gillstrom, and I have been
serving as our steering committee’s chair-elect since March 2015.
In my second letter, we preview the work showcased in our ITAIS
academic session for TESOL 2016 in greater detail. My main job on the
steering committee is to organize this session. I hope you will join us
on Friday, 8 April, from 1 pm–2:45 pm in room 319 at the Baltimore
Convention Center.
We’ll hear from three researchers who work with conversation
analysis (CA). I was inspired to coordinate this panel after viewing a
session at TESOL 2015 by our current ITAIS secretary, Dr. Stephen Daniel
Looney (Pennsylvania State University). He put together a fascinating
research-oriented presentation on the use of discourse markers in
physics labs. There was positive buzz in the room after his talk, and it
was clear that our IS wanted to hear more!
I have asked Dr. Looney to return this year and present on his current research, which he describes here:
Early ITA research noted the “messiness” of university science
lab interactions (Myers, 1994). This presentation unpacks some of this
messiness by looking at pre-openings between ITAs and undergraduates in
Introduction to physics labs. In these sequences, students and ITAs rely
on distinct verbal and nonverbal resources to focus shared attention on
lab equipment and reports before asking and answering questions.
Implications for the use of naturally occurring video data as well as
authentic classroom materials in ITA preparation are
discussed.
Dr. Looney will be joined by Innhwa Park (West Chester
University), who will present on research she does in cooperation with
Stephanie Kim (California State University, Northridge). You may
remember the work of Dr. Park and Dr. Kim from the
March 2014 joint ITA-AL IS newsletter. This is how they
describe the direction of their current research:
Using conversation analysis, this study examines video-recorded
interactions between questioners, who act as “undergraduate students,”
and test takers during an English oral proficiency exam for
international teaching assistants. After the Q-A sequence, the test
taker has to find his/her way back to the ongoing talk to keep the flow
of the presentation. The focus of this study is on the ways in which the
test taker organizes the shift from the Q-A sequence to the main topic
sequence. We also attempt to explore how they compare to those of
(near-) native English speaker TAs.
Finally, we are thrilled to have Jean Wong (The College of New
Jersey) join us to discuss “Storytelling as a Window on L2 Interactional
Competence.” Dr. Wong does not work directly with ITAs, but is an
expert in CA, and the coauthor of a book on the subject, Conversation
Analysis and Second Language Pedagogy. Here is a
preview of her talk:
In this session, I examine two different stories produced by
the same L2 speaker of English in two different L1-L2 conversations.
Using a CA framework, I analyze the stories on a turn-by-turn basis with
respect to their occasioned productions, and consider how that might
inform us about the L2 user’s interactional competence. Ramifications
for second language pedagogy are suggested.
Again, please join us Friday, 8 April, from 1 pm–2:45 pm in
room 319 at the Baltimore Convention Center. If you are inspired by this
panel and would like to provide input for the next academic session,
please let me know!
Reference
Myers, C. (1994). Question-based discourse in science labs:
Issues for ITAs. In C. G. Madden & C. L. Myers (Eds.), Discourse and performance of international teaching
assistants (pp. 83–102). Alexandria, VA: Teachers of English
to Speakers of Other Languages, Inc. |