DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...87
Hits 1 – 20 of 1.721

1
"Into"-causatives in world Englishes
In: English world-wide. - Amsterdam [u.a.] : Benjamins 43 (2022) 1, 1-32
BLLDB
Show details
2
Lived Experience of Dementia in the New Zealand Indian Community: A Qualitative Study With Family Care Givers and People Living With Dementia
BASE
Show details
3
LINGUIST List Resources for New Zealand Sign Language
BASE
Show details
4
Lived Experience of Dementia in the New Zealand Indian Community: A Qualitative Study with Family Care Givers and People Living with Dementia
In: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health; Volume 19; Issue 3; Pages: 1432 (2022)
BASE
Show details
5
What counts as knowing
Gandell, Robyn. - 2022
BASE
Show details
6
What movement counts as students' mathematical knowing
Gandell, Robyn. - 2022
BASE
Show details
7
Acoustic features of dysphonic speech vs normal speech in New Zealand English speakers
Erfanian Sabaee, Maryam; Sharifzadeh, Hamid. - : Computing and Information Technology Research and Education New Zealand (CITRENZ), 2022
BASE
Show details
8
Ko Te Reo i Te Rarawa pēhea rainī te tūāhua reo o ngā mātua tūpuna i Pukepoto
McGrath, Daniel. - : The University of Waikato, 2022
BASE
Show details
9
Children’s negotiation of meanings about geometric shapes and their properties in a New Zealand multilingual primary classroom
Sharma , Shweta. - : The University of Waikato, 2022
Abstract: New Zealand is a nation of superdiversity in terms of ethnicities and languages spoken. This superdiversity is reflected in New Zealand multilingual classrooms. In the New Zealand primary school mathematics curriculum, the teaching and learning of early geometry focuses on recognising and understanding shapes, their properties, and symmetries, and on describing the position and movement of shapes. The Achievement Objectives suggest that the children at Curriculum Level 3, which roughly translates to Year 5/6 (9 to 11-year-old), are expected to identify, describe, and classify two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) shapes by spatial features. Acknowledging the multilingual context of a New Zealand classroom, this study investigated how children negotiate their meanings about 2D shapes, 3D shapes, and their properties as they engage in whole-class and/or group interactions in a New Zealand primary classroom. Accordingly, following research questions (RQ) guided this study: 1. What discursive constructions do 9 to 11-year-old children use to represent their understanding of 2D shapes, 3D shapes, and their properties in a New Zealand multilingual primary classroom? 2. How do 9 to 11-year-old children interact to construct their understanding of 2D shapes, 3D shapes, and their properties in a New Zealand multilingual primary classroom? 3. What characteristics of dialogic space influence 9 to 11-year-old children’s negotiation of meanings about 2D shapes, 3D shapes, and their properties in a New Zealand multilingual primary classroom? A qualitative study informed by the Discursive Psychology perspective (Edwards & Potter, 1992) within the Critical Inquiry research paradigm was undertaken. Edwards and Potter (1992) argue that language-in-use is construed as an action in itself and, as a result, knowledge is taken as situated and constructed through language-in-use as people interact. Bakhtin’s (1981) Dialogic Theory and Garfinkel’s (1967) Ethnomethodology informed the theoretical framework of this study. Data were gathered from a Year 5/6 classroom in a New Zealand English-medium school. The participants were fifteen children (nine multilingual, six monolingual) and their mathematics teacher. Six geometry lessons on shapes and their properties were observed and audiovisually recorded. Additional data were gathered from a variety of sources, including semi-structured teacher interviews, four focus group interviews with children, a short questionnaire filled by the parents, children’s work samples, and teacher’s unit plan. Data from different sources allowed me to establish the reliability and validity of the findings. Data were analysed in three phases: thematic analysis, micro-level analysis, and macro-level analysis. Five themes were identified from thematic analysis of data to explore the discursive constructions that the children used to represent their understanding of shapes and their properties (RQ1). These themes are: (i) making sense of 2D shapes, (ii) making sense of 3D shapes, (iii) relating 2D shapes with 3D shapes, (iv) mathematical construct of dimension, and (v) naming shapes in Te Reo Māori (the Indigenous language of New Zealand). For the purpose of managing and presenting analysis, two Key Moments within each of the five themes were identified for further analysis at the micro-level and macro-level. For the micro-level analysis, I used selected Conversation Analysis (Schegloff & Sacks, 1973) techniques to explore what is said and how it is said (RQ2). Based on the micro-level analysis findings, the macro-level analysis was conducted using Bakhtinian concepts of speech genres, discourses, heteroglossia and unitary language, double-voicedness, and chronotopes to explore the characteristics of dialogic space that influence children’s negotiations of meanings about shapes and their properties (RQ3). The study reveals four novel findings. First, the analogy of “flat vs fat” may not be useful in developing children’s geometric understanding of dimension. Second, the study indicates that multilingual children use prosodic repertoires from their multiple languages as they engage in whole-class or group interactions, and these prosodic repertoires may be interpreted differently by monolingual English-speaking children. Third, the study reveals the presence of several speech genres available to teachers and children within the dialogic space of a multilingual classroom. Fourth, the study shows that multiple meanings could be drawn out for each utterance, and the meaning of an utterance is dependent not only upon the interaction of unitary language and heteroglossia between the discourses but within the discourse as well. The findings of this study suggest, first, that a comprehensive definition of dimension needs to be included in the school curriculum. Second, teachers may benefit from learning about prosodic features that multilingual children may use to show their confidence or doubt about their learning, along with several speech genres available within the dialogic space. Several ideas for further research in the mathematics education field with a focus on developing an understanding of geometry concepts such as dimension are also suggested. Overall, the study highlighted the need for teachers and teacher educators to recognise subtle yet powerful aspects of language use that influence children’s negotiation of meanings about geometric ideas as children engage in classroom interactions.
Keyword: Āhua; Āhuahanga; Ako; Bakhtin; Bilingualism in children -- New Zealand -- Psychology; Conversation analysis; Elementary school teachers -- New Zealand -- Attitudes; Geometry; Geometry -- Study and teaching (Primary) -- New Zealand; Kura tuatahi; Learning; Mathematics -- Study and teaching (Primary) -- New Zealand; Multilingual; Primary school; Psycholinguistics -- New Zealand; Psychology of; Reorua; School children -- New Zealand -- Attitudes; Shapes -- Study and teaching (Primary) -- New Zealand; Whakamātau hinengaro
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/14752
BASE
Hide details
10
Linguistic landscaping and the Pacific Region : colonization, indigenous identities, and critical discourse theory
Johnson, Diane Elizabeth. - London : Lexington Books, 2021
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
Show details
11
The Value and Use of the Telugu Language in Young Adults of Telugu-Speaking Backgrounds in New Zealand
Kasarla, Lahari. - : Auckland University of Technology, 2021
BASE
Show details
12
Brain-Inspired Audio-Visual Information Processing Using Spiking Neural Networks
Wendt, Anne. - : Auckland University of Technology, 2021
BASE
Show details
13
Formal grammar, usage probabilities, and auxiliary contraction
In: Language. - Washington, DC : Linguistic Society of America 97 (2021) 1, 108-150
BLLDB
Show details
14
WALS Online Resources for New Zealand Sign Language
: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
BASE
Show details
15
Potiki in Portuguese ; language hybridity and the pitfalls of paratext
BASE
Show details
16
Glottolog 4.4 Resources for New Zealand Sign Language
: Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology, 2021
BASE
Show details
17
Index to the Jaina-Onomasticon of Johannes Klatt
Flügel, Peter; Krümpelmann, Kornelius. - : Harrassowitz, 2021
BASE
Show details
18
Factors influencing adult learners’ satisfaction and retention
Monk, Wendy Mae. - : Toi Ohomai, 2021
BASE
Show details
19
Sustainability of community-based theatre: A case study of Repertory Invercargill
Vyas, Bhargav. - : Southern Institute of Technology (SIT), 2021
BASE
Show details
20
Puni Reo Poitarawhiti: Playing in te reo Māori
Lee-Morgan, Jenny; Martin, J.; Mane, Jo. - : Otago Polytechnic, 2021
BASE
Show details

Page: 1 2 3 4 5...87

Catalogues
76
7
201
0
2
0
0
Bibliographies
598
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
8
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
2
0
0
1
Open access documents
1.084
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern