학술논문

Classroom Greetings: More than a Simple Hello
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Source
Iranian Journal of Language Teaching Research. Oct 2020 8(3):41-56.
Subject
Classroom Communication
Language Usage
Grade 2
Elementary School Students
Pragmatics
Elementary School Teachers
Teacher Student Relationship
Sense of Community
Teaching Methods
Meetings
Classroom Techniques
Case Studies
Ethnography
Language
English
ISSN
2322-1291
Abstract
In classrooms, the act of saying hello - the ritual of shaking hands or hugging, and taking the time to exchange information -- can enact relational values of "We"-ness, of belonging. In this paper we highlight how one second grade teacher's personalized and consistent use of greetings, and apprenticeship of students into how to greet and be greeted, functions to build community and involvement. Data are part of a two-year case study of a second-grade classroom in a diverse urban US context. This study examines approximately 16 weeks of classroom greeting data collected from Morning Meetings (10 hours, 39 minutes) and then homes in on 5 minutes across one day for a close look at the apprenticeship into, and roles of, being a greeter. Analysis explicates how greetings are used in different ways across time and how they work together to build classroom community togetherness. We argue that classroom greetings are a partial marker of dialogic pedagogy.