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Pedagogy, purpose, and the second language learner in on-line communities

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Pedagogy, purpose, and the second language learner in on-line communities. / Potts, Diane.
In: Canadian Modern Language Review, Vol. 62, No. 1, 2005, p. 137-160.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Potts D. Pedagogy, purpose, and the second language learner in on-line communities. Canadian Modern Language Review. 2005;62(1):137-160. doi: 10.1353/cml.2005.0045

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Potts, Diane. / Pedagogy, purpose, and the second language learner in on-line communities. In: Canadian Modern Language Review. 2005 ; Vol. 62, No. 1. pp. 137-160.

Bibtex

@article{dac7a5ea44c64696a2ffc016c2da3b61,
title = "Pedagogy, purpose, and the second language learner in on-line communities",
abstract = "Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are often portrayed as offering a collaborative community space in which native and non-native language speakers reciprocally scaffold linguistic, cultural and content knowledge, a space which assists students in overcoming well-documented challenges encountered in traditional classrooms (Leki, 2001; Morita, 2000, 2004). However, recent studies point to the communicative disjunctures arising from variances in cultural capital and socio-technological histories in on-line dialogic encounters between student groups (see Belz, 2003; Kramsch & Thorne, 2002; Thorne, 2003, 2000). This article examines on-line community formation among participants in a graduate seminar on modern language education and the pedagogical design that facilitated the development of norms of joint construction of knowledge, reciprocity, and sharing. Drawing upon survey and interview data as well as on a descriptive statistical analysis of the bulletin board interaction, the study explores how design provided non-native speakers with opportunities to capitalize on their existing experiential and intellectual capital.",
author = "Diane Potts",
year = "2005",
doi = "10.1353/cml.2005.0045",
language = "English",
volume = "62",
pages = "137--160",
journal = "Canadian Modern Language Review",
issn = "0008-4506",
publisher = "University of Toronto Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pedagogy, purpose, and the second language learner in on-line communities

AU - Potts, Diane

PY - 2005

Y1 - 2005

N2 - Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are often portrayed as offering a collaborative community space in which native and non-native language speakers reciprocally scaffold linguistic, cultural and content knowledge, a space which assists students in overcoming well-documented challenges encountered in traditional classrooms (Leki, 2001; Morita, 2000, 2004). However, recent studies point to the communicative disjunctures arising from variances in cultural capital and socio-technological histories in on-line dialogic encounters between student groups (see Belz, 2003; Kramsch & Thorne, 2002; Thorne, 2003, 2000). This article examines on-line community formation among participants in a graduate seminar on modern language education and the pedagogical design that facilitated the development of norms of joint construction of knowledge, reciprocity, and sharing. Drawing upon survey and interview data as well as on a descriptive statistical analysis of the bulletin board interaction, the study explores how design provided non-native speakers with opportunities to capitalize on their existing experiential and intellectual capital.

AB - Information and communication technologies (ICTs) are often portrayed as offering a collaborative community space in which native and non-native language speakers reciprocally scaffold linguistic, cultural and content knowledge, a space which assists students in overcoming well-documented challenges encountered in traditional classrooms (Leki, 2001; Morita, 2000, 2004). However, recent studies point to the communicative disjunctures arising from variances in cultural capital and socio-technological histories in on-line dialogic encounters between student groups (see Belz, 2003; Kramsch & Thorne, 2002; Thorne, 2003, 2000). This article examines on-line community formation among participants in a graduate seminar on modern language education and the pedagogical design that facilitated the development of norms of joint construction of knowledge, reciprocity, and sharing. Drawing upon survey and interview data as well as on a descriptive statistical analysis of the bulletin board interaction, the study explores how design provided non-native speakers with opportunities to capitalize on their existing experiential and intellectual capital.

U2 - 10.1353/cml.2005.0045

DO - 10.1353/cml.2005.0045

M3 - Journal article

VL - 62

SP - 137

EP - 160

JO - Canadian Modern Language Review

JF - Canadian Modern Language Review

SN - 0008-4506

IS - 1

ER -