The work defines the notion of 'pedagogical stance', viewed as the type of position taken, the role assumed, the image projected and the type of social behavior performed by a teacher in his/her teaching interaction with a pupil. At any moment while interacting with pupil(s), a teacher takes a 'didactic' stance, concerning his/her cognitive work on the student, how s/he intends to bring about his/her learning, and an 'affective - relational' stance, the type of relationship s/he wants to entertain with the pupil and the type of emotions she tends to elicit in him/her or by which s/he colors interaction. Two types of 'didactic' stance (maieutic and efficient) and four types of 'affective - relational' stance (friendly, dominating, warm dominating, and secure base) are distinguished, their typical verbal and multimodal social signals are singled out, and a study is presented to detect stances from these social signals in 21 teacher-pupil interactions. © 2012 IEEE.
Pedagogical stance: The teacher's position and its social signals
D'Errico F.
Conceptualization
;
2012-01-01
Abstract
The work defines the notion of 'pedagogical stance', viewed as the type of position taken, the role assumed, the image projected and the type of social behavior performed by a teacher in his/her teaching interaction with a pupil. At any moment while interacting with pupil(s), a teacher takes a 'didactic' stance, concerning his/her cognitive work on the student, how s/he intends to bring about his/her learning, and an 'affective - relational' stance, the type of relationship s/he wants to entertain with the pupil and the type of emotions she tends to elicit in him/her or by which s/he colors interaction. Two types of 'didactic' stance (maieutic and efficient) and four types of 'affective - relational' stance (friendly, dominating, warm dominating, and secure base) are distinguished, their typical verbal and multimodal social signals are singled out, and a study is presented to detect stances from these social signals in 21 teacher-pupil interactions. © 2012 IEEE.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


