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American Educational Research Journal
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Locating Learning in In-Service Education for Preschool Teachers

Carolyn Temple Adger and Susan M. Hoyle

Center for Applied Linguistics

David K. Dickinson

Education Development Center

Discourse analysis of interaction in a course on language and literacy development elucidates and exemplifies how preschool teachers constructed new knowledge that can be assumed to contribute to the improved literacy instruction observed in their classrooms. An analytic framework rooted in socio-cultural theory and interactional sociolinguistic methods foregrounds the issues of whose sentiments and knowledge got taken up on the conversational floor and what specific new knowledge was conversationally constructed. We use this framework to explicate a discussion in which the teachers and the instructor assembled a knowledge structure. The group’s emergent response to a question gained propositional content as participants jointly created and used social and informational resources. This approach allows insight into the sociolinguistic processes that contribute to effective professional development experiences.

Key Words: discourse analysis • early literacy • professional development • teacher learning

American Educational Research Journal, Vol. 41, No. 4, 867-900 (2004)
DOI: 10.3102/00028312041004867


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