Yabancı dil olarak Türkçe öğretimi
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Date
2019Author
Sumruk, Hatice
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This study aims to reveal, from a Conversation Analytic (CA) perspective, the function
of “hedef kelime+ne demek” (NDK) (what does “the target word” mean?) questions as
a resourceful classroom discourse in Turkish as a foreign language classes, creating
various opportunities of learning in vocabulary teaching interaction. Since both learning
and teaching a foreign language positions the interaction at the heart of educational
goals, achieved through co-constructed interaction of both language learners and
teachers (Markee, 2000; Seedhouse, 2004, 2005; Sert, 2015; Walsh, 2011), an
investigation into interaction in L2 language classrooms could explicate the way
teaching and learning are shaped in a detailed way. CA has a methodological strength to
scrutinize those explications which are seen-but-unnoticed (Garfinkel, 1967) by
participants of interaction, in this case by teachers and learners. Classroom interaction
has its own interactional patterns; there is an interactional asymmetry between a student
and teacher. Most of the time, teacher has an unquestionable authority of knowledge,
and thus, manages the learner contributions in accordance with pedagogical aims
(Gardner, 2013; Mehan, 1979; Sert, 2016). The data was collected within two-week
period in 2017-2018 from a Turkish as a foreign language teaching institution in the
southern region of Turkey, and consisted the transcription of 11-hour of video
recordings, selected out of 52 class hours. As the first comprehensive study of Turkish
as a foreign language classroom from CA perspective, the analysis has shown that
preferred learner responses (e.g. providing an example, the definition, a synonym, the
translation of target vocabulary item or using body language) can be elicitated through
NDK questions in vocabulary teaching interactions. The findings of the study also
reveals that preferred responses can be facilitated through the usage of various
interactional resources (e.g. clues, repairs, repetitions, and dialogical explanations)
together with classroom discourse that may be used for this purpose (discourse markers,
prosodic resources, spatial resources and reformulations). Therefore, this study has implications for Turkish as a foreign language instructors to provide useful interactional
patterns to achieve certain interactional and pedagogical goals. This study has also
implications for L2 language teaching, specifically for Turkish as a foreign language
teaching, such as providing a new perspective to be able to improve L2 teaching
practices.