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Article
Oral Narrative Genres as Dialogic Resources for Classroom Literature Study: A Contextualized Case Study of Conversational Narrative Discussion
American Educational Research Journal
  • Mary M Juzwik, Michigan State University
  • Martin Nystrand, University of Wisconsin-Madison
  • Sean Kelly, University of Notre Dame
  • Michael Sherry, Michigan State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2008
Keywords
  • narrative,
  • genre,
  • literature,
  • literacy,
  • discussion,
  • dialogic instruction
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.3102/0002831208321444
Disciplines
Abstract

Five questions guided a case study exploring the relationship between oral narrative and discussion in middle school literature study: (a) Relative to similar classrooms in a large-scale study, how can overall literature instruction be characterized? (b) Relative to similar classrooms in a large-scale study, how well do students achieve in the focal classroom? (c) What, if any, are the links between oral narrative and discussion? (d) If discussion and narrative co-occur, what sorts of oral narratives do narrators tell in discussions? and (e) If discussion and narrative co-occur, how can we characterize the overlap in terms of interaction? In the frequent conversational narrative discussions, where oral narrative and discussion discourse overlapped, teacher and students used various kinds of oral narrative genres to prime, sustain, ratify, and amplify discussion.

Citation / Publisher Attribution

American Educational Research Journal, v. 45, issue 4, p. 1111-1154

Citation Information
Mary M Juzwik, Martin Nystrand, Sean Kelly and Michael Sherry. "Oral Narrative Genres as Dialogic Resources for Classroom Literature Study: A Contextualized Case Study of Conversational Narrative Discussion" American Educational Research Journal Vol. 45 Iss. 4 (2008) p. 1111 - 1154
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/michael-sherry/6/