Quality Talk: Developing Students' Discourse to Promote High-level Comprehension

Students often struggle to comprehend complex text. In response, we conducted an initial, year-long study of Quality Talk, a teacher-facilitated, small-group discussion approach designed to enhance students' basic and high-level comprehension, in two fourth-grade classrooms. Specifically, teach...

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Veröffentlicht in:American educational research journal 2018-10, Vol.55 (5), p.1113-1160
Hauptverfasser: Murphy, P. Karen, Greene, Jeffrey A., Firetto, Carla M., Hendrick, Brendan D., Li, Mengyi, Montalbano, Cristin, Wei, Liwei
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Students often struggle to comprehend complex text. In response, we conducted an initial, year-long study of Quality Talk, a teacher-facilitated, small-group discussion approach designed to enhance students' basic and high-level comprehension, in two fourth-grade classrooms. Specifically, teachers delivered instructional mini-lessons on discourse elements (e.g., questioning or argumentation) and conducted weekly text-based discussions in their language arts classes. Analysis of the videorecorded discussions showed decreases in teacher-initiated discourse elements, indicating a release of responsibility to students, whereas students' discourse reflected increased critical-analytic thinking (e.g., elaborated explanations or exploratory talk). Importantly, statistically and practically significant increases were evidenced on written measures of students' basic and high-level comprehension, indicating the promise of small-group discourse as a way to foster individual student learning outcomes.
ISSN:0002-8312
1935-1011
DOI:10.3102/0002831218771303