Traditional concerns with classroom communication have centered on
questions such as who talks more, whether the interaction is
teacher-centered or student-centered, whether participation is
restricted to a few or available to all, what kinds of questions
teachers ask, and what kinds of feedback they give. These indicators
provide a simple and useful way of capturing classroom communication in
distributional and categorical terms. Less attention has been devoted to
observing and understanding the quality of this communication - whether
it facilitates learning regardless of, for example, who talks more.
Based on over a decade of fine-grained analysis of video-recorded ESL
classroom interaction, this book offers one way of seeing and gauging
the quality of classroom communication beyond distributions and
categories. In particular, by parsing detailed transcripts of actual
classroom interaction, it invites reflective conversations on how three
principles of skillful classroom communication may be practiced in the
micro-moments of classroom interaction: fostering an inviting
environment, attending to student voices, and balancing competing
demands (FAB). The goal is to cultivate a mentality of
micro-reflection-one that sensitizes teachers to the consequentiality of
every move they make as they make them in the simultaneity and
sequentiality of second-by-second classroom interaction.