Post on 06-May-2023
Teacher–pupil dialogue with pupils
with special educational needs in the
National Literacy Strategy
Frank Hardman*, Fay Smith and Kate WallUniversity of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
This paper reports on an investigation into the interactive and discourse styles of a nationally
representative sample of primary teachers (n 5 70) as they work with pupils who experience
difficulties in literacy development during whole class and group-based sections of the literacy
hour. Using a computerized observation schedule and discourse analysis system, the paper
explores the impact of the official endorsement of ‘interactive whole-class teaching’ on the teaching
of pupils with special educational needs (SEN) in the literacy hour to see whether the National
Literacy Strategy (NLS) is promoting their active involvement. The findings suggest that while the
NLS is encouraging teachers to involve pupils with SEN in the literacy hour, the discourse is
dominated by teacher explanation and question/answer sequences that provide little opportunity
for pupils of all abilities to initiate, explore and elaborate on their ideas. The implications of the
findings are considered in the light of their impact on classroom pedagogy and the professional
development of teachers who are charged with implementing the national policy-led initiatives like
the NLS.
Introduction
Since it came to power in 1997, a major thrust of the Labour Government has been
to address standards of literacy in English primary schools. In a bid to achieve this
end, the National Literacy Strategy (NLS) was introduced (DfEE, 1998a). The
NLS was intended to have a major role in raising standards in literacy and reducing
the alleged tail of low achievement that was said to characterize the English
education system (see, for example, Brooks et al., 1996). The framework set out the
teaching objectives for pupils from Reception to Year 6 and gave guidance on the
structure of the ‘literacy hour’ in which teaching should take place. The prescription
consisted of 30 minutes whole-class text, sentence and word level teaching, 20
minutes independent work and a 10 minute plenary. As a result, pupils are expected
to spend approximately 60% of their time being directly taught and 40% working
independently. With regard to pupils with special educational needs (SEN), the
Framework for Teaching stated that many pupils with difficulties may need some extra
*Corresponding author. School of Education, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle
upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK. Email: F.C.Hardman@newcastle.ac.uk
Educational Review, Vol. 57, No. 3, August 2005
ISSN 0013-1911 (print)/ISSN 1465-3397 (online)/05/030299-18
# Educational Review
DOI: 10.1080/00131910500149051
support to enable them to play a full part in the literacy hour (DfEE, 1998a). But it
also maintained that all children should be included in the literacy hour, keeping
withdrawn groups to a minimum.
It was claimed that the NLS was firmly based on national and international
evidence and the Department for Education and Skills took the extraordinary step of
commissioning an academic to discover what that evidence might be after the
strategy had been implemented (Beard, 1999). In his review of the evidence, Beard
argues the NLS draws on several programmes specifically targeted at underachieving
pupils. The work of Slavin (1996) in the US and Crevola and Hill (1998) in
Australia feature prominently in the review and the NLS was said to share many
features including a fast-paced, structured curriculum, direct interactive teaching,
systematic phonics and whole-class and group-based reading and writing activities.
A major feature of the strategy, therefore, has been an emphasis on direct,
‘interactive whole-class teaching’ on which a large part of the success of the NLS is
claimed to rest, drawing mainly on the school effectiveness and school improvement
literature (e.g. Reynolds & Farrell, 1996). The research drew attention to the way
teaching in many Asian and Continental countries respect individuality, yet
structure learning tasks on the basis of what children have in common and tries,
as far as possible, to bring all children in a class along together to reduce the wide
range of attainment. It is therefore suggested that more interactive forms of whole-
class teaching will play a vital role in raising literacy standards for all children by
promoting high quality dialogue and discussion and raising inclusion, understanding
and learning performance. In the NLS framework, successful teaching is described
as ‘discursive, characterised by high quality oral work’ and ‘interactive, encouraging,
expecting and extending pupils’ contributions’ (DfEE, 1998a, p. 8). Interactive
whole-class teaching, therefore, is not seen as a return to a traditional ‘lecturing and
drill’ approach in which pupils remain passive, but as an ‘active teaching’ model
encouraging a two-way process.
Following publication of the framework, criticisms were raised that there was no
clear definition and little practical advice on what interactive whole-class teaching
was and how it should be used in the classroom. Galton et al. (1999), for example,
argued little evidence had been presented to show it differs from traditional whole-
class teaching as reported in earlier studies of the primary English classroom (e.g.
Mortimore et al., 1988; Pollard et al., 1994; Alexander et al., 1996). Studies of
classroom discourse had failed to identify patterns of teaching which went beyond
what Sinclair and Coulthard (1975) identified as the ‘initiation–response–feedback’,
or ‘IRF’, teacher–pupil exchange pattern, and little evidence existed as to how
interactive whole-class teaching differed from this traditional pattern. Criticism was
also raised about whether the needs of all children across the primary age range
could be met by a national strategy; in other words, whether the literacy hour, with
its emphasis on whole-class teaching and inclusion of pupils with SEN, was flexible
enough for use across a year or class (Byers, 1999; Knight, 1999; Dehaney, 2000;
Fisher, 2000semi; Wearmouth & Soler, 2001; Miller et al., 2003). Corden (2000)
argues, however, that the advantage of whole-class teaching of pupils with SEN is
300 F. Hardman et al.
that it helps these children feel part of the class and to participate on a more level
plane with their peers.
There was also concern about the lack of advice for teaching pupils with SEN in
the NLS framework, apart from a suggestion that groups of pupils should be
differentiated by ability during the literacy hour, and that individuals should be
‘well-trained’ not to interrupt during the activities. It was not until 6 months after
implementation that additional guidance was provided (DfEE, 1998b). At six pages,
Byers (1999) suggests that it left too many questions unanswered and many schools
were left to make their own sense of the requirements. This was followed by further
guidance for supporting pupils with SEN in the literacy hour (DfEE, 2000a) which
offered advice about interactive techniques with pupils with SEN building on earlier
training materials (DfEE, 1999a, 1999b, 1999c). Teachers were advised to stay
open to unexpected ideas, to build on pupil answers, to ask for clarification, and to
encourage pupils to elaborate on their answers so as to ensure a better teacher–pupil
balance. The training materials also promoted games and drama activities as a way
of encouraging active learning and these were included in subsequent materials on
the teaching of grammar (DfEE, 2000b), early writing (DfEE, 2001a) and phonics
(DfES, 2001b). The guided reading and writing sessions were also seen as providing
a shared context to encourage greater pupil participation and decision-making.
English et al.’s (2002) research, however, suggests many teachers were facing
pedagogical confusion because of the need for lessons to be ‘well-paced with a sense
of urgency’ and at the same time ‘ensuring pupils’ contributions are encouraged,
expected and extended’ (DfEE, 1998a, p. 8).
It was in light of this earlier debate about whether pupils with SEN were being
accommodated within the prescribed structure of the literacy hour that we set about
investigating the national strategy’s impact on the teaching of pupils with SEN. The
main question we set out to answer was: what interactive and discourse strategies are
teachers using to actively engage pupils with SEN in whole-class and group-based
sections of the literacy hour?
The study
In order to study the interaction and discourse styles of the 70 teachers teaching the
literacy hour between January and May 2001, we used quantitative and qualitative
methods: a computer assisted systematic observation schedule and discourse
analysis of transcripts from video recorded lessons. The two approaches allowed
for methodological triangulation to give greater confidence in the findings.
Computer assisted observation
Observations were carried out using a computerized observation system developed
by the research team known as the Classroom Interaction System (CIS) (Smith &
Hardman, 2003). A sampling method known as focal sampling with multiple actors
was used. This meant that we could focus upon the teacher and other ‘focal subjects’
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 301
(e.g. the SEN pupils). Our coding scheme enabled us to focus on the following
participants: the teacher, four pupils identified by the teacher as having the most
special need in literacy, ‘other’ pupils (their peers) and the whole class.
The coding scheme uses ‘The Observer’ software (Noldus Information
Technology, 1995) to log the number of different types of discourse moves made
by teachers and pupils. This was done using a handheld device about the size of a
calculator. This computerized system enabled us to observe the lesson in real-time
and was quicker than traditional paper and pencil methods because the data were
instantly stored, and therefore available for immediate analysis. We obtained good
measures of inter-rater and intra-rater reliability (correlations of 0.86 and 0.78
respectively).
The computerized system logged (for each teaching exchange): the actor, the
discourse move and who the receiver was. It therefore primarily focused on the
three-part, IRF structure and gathered data on teachers’ questions, whether
questions were answered (and by whom), and the types of evaluation given in
response to answers. It also recorded pupil initiations in the form of questions and
statements. The system recorded whether teacher questions were open (i.e. defined
in terms of the teacher’s reaction to the pupils’ answer: only if the teacher accepted
more than one answer to the question would it be judged as open) or closed (i.e.
calling for a single response or offering facts). Responses were coded according to
whether a pupil with SEN responded or ‘other’ pupil, or whether there was a choral
reply. Teacher feedback to a pupil’s answer was coded according to whether it was
praised, criticized, or accepted. The system also captured two alternative strategies
in the feedback move: probes (where the teacher stayed with the same child to ask
further questions) and uptake questions (where the teacher incorporated a pupil’s
answer into a subsequent question). Research suggests such feedback moves can
help the traditional IRF structure take on a variety of forms and functions leading to
different levels of pupil participation and engagement (Nassaji & Wells, 2000).
Transcript analysis
In order to triangulate the systematic observation using the CIS schedule, a sub-
sample of 10 ‘effective’ teachers as measured by value added data, and whose
discourse patterns appeared more varied on the computer analysis, were video
recorded. They were recorded while teaching the whole class and a group of pupils
with SEN for transcription and coding using discourse analysis. The whole-class and
group-based transcripts were then analysed using a framework adapted from Sinclair
and Coulthard’s (1975) system of discourse analysis focusing on teaching
exchanges.
Sample characteristics
The national sample of 70 primary school teachers was identified using Performance
Indicators in Primary Schools (PIPS) data provided by the Curriculum, Evaluation
302 F. Hardman et al.
and Management Centre at Durham University (Tymms, 1999). These tests assess
attainment in maths, reading and science, vocabulary, non-verbal ability and home
background of pupils, and attitude and self-esteem. Using PIPS data ensured the
sample included teachers working in a range of socio-economic and geographical
settings from Reception through to Year 6. It also allowed us to identify ‘effective’
teachers whose value-added scores had been above average in the previous year. The
sample was drawn from the north-east, north-west and south-east of England.
Only six of the 70 teachers were male. Forty-six per cent of the teachers taught
Key Stage 1 (KS1) and 54% taught Key Stage 2 (KS2). A quarter of the sample
taught Reception, while the rest were evenly distributed between Years 1 to 6. Forty
of the teachers (57%) were classed as being ‘effective’ in their teaching of literacy
(according to the value-added data—above ‘+2’) and 30 were ‘average’ (their value
added scores lay between ¡0.5). Most of the teachers taught a mixed ability group
(74%), 14% taught a lower set, 6% taught a middle set and 6% an upper set. Most
of the observations took place first thing in the morning (53% before the morning
break), 41% took place just before lunch, and the remaining observations (only 6%)
were just after lunch.
Table 1 shows the main characteristics of each class. The classes ranged in size
from 10 to 33 with an average of 25 pupils. The average number of pupils with SEN
per class was seven (the average percentage of pupils with SEN in a class was 29%),
and the standard deviation was quite high. In order to identify pupils with SEN we
asked teachers to select four pupils who were having the most problems with literacy.
Most pupils, over 93%, fell within stages 1–3 of the Code of Practice (DfE, 1994).
The remaining 7% of pupils had statements for language-related or behavioural
difficulties and none of the pupils had severe hearing impairment or other physical
disabilities. Like Croll and Moses (2000), we perceived teachers were making
judgements about pupils with SEN partly, but not entirely, with reference to the
overall attainment in their school. This suggested, because of the varying socio-
economic status of the schools, that in a high attaining school a child would be on
the register when a child with the same attainment level in a lower attaining school
would not, making the judgements, at times, seem a little idiosyncratic. The classes
were roughly half-and-half male/female, with 53% male pupils in class being the
average.
Table 1. Class characteristics for the observation sample
Minimum Maximum Mean Standard deviation
(SD)
No. of pupil in class 10 33 25.15 5.83
No. of pupils with SEN 0 29 6.90 5.20
Pupils with SEN in class (%) 0 100 29.10 22.89
No. of females in class 2 20 11.90 3.95
No. of males in class 4 21 13.36 3.72
Male pupils in class (%) 31 83 53.25 10.97
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 303
The average length of the 70 literacy hours we observed was 57 minutes; however,
lessons varied in length from 31 minutes to 1 hour 19 minutes. Forty-five of the 70
teachers (64%) followed the traditional format of the literacy hour by having one
whole-class section, one group work section and then a plenary section. Some of the
other teachers broke up the literacy hour more by, for example, having two group
sessions and two whole-class sessions. Of our sample, 19 teachers did not hold a
plenary session (27%). We found that teachers are spending slightly more time on
group work and less time on the plenary session (only 5 minutes on average). Many
teachers also identified the main learning objectives for the lesson at text, sentence or
word level.
Findings
The following section reports on the findings of the CIS schedule and transcripts
analysing the patterns of teacher–pupil interaction with pupils with SEN compared
to that of their peers, together with an analysis of teacher-led group-based activities
pupils with SEN. A more detailed discussion of the whole-class findings can be
found in Hardman et al. (2003).
Teacher initiated discourse
In the following analysis of the whole-class interaction, we present the data as
averages per hour: thus taking into account the length of each teacher’s lesson.
Figure 1 shows the typical teacher-initiated discourse profile for a literacy hour (we
are not, at this stage, looking at any pupil discourse).
Figure 1 shows that closed questions were the most frequent form of discourse
behaviour (on average 52 closed questions were asked per literacy hour). The
teachers in our sample directed the pupils 29 times per lesson and explained 28
Figure 1. Discourse profile for a typical literacy hour
304 F. Hardman et al.
times. It is clear that directive behaviour is the dominant form of discourse in the
literacy hour.
Teacher-initiated behaviours that were less common included uptake questions
(three per lesson), writing—where the teacher would be writing on a board—(three
per lesson), and answering a pupil’s questions (four per lesson). Teachers classed as
being ‘average’ by the value added data asked more closed questions and fewer open
questions than the ‘effective’ teachers. While the difference between these two
groups was not significant for closed questions (t 5 21.19, ns), it was for open
questions (t 5 2.54, p,0.05). We also compared the two groups of teachers for the
whole-class and group-based teaching and found similar results. Differences across
key stages also proved significant: KS1 teachers asked twice the number of closed
questions compared to KS2 teachers (t 5 4.85, p,0.001), they also directed more
(t 5 2.80, p,0.01). KS2 teachers asked significantly more uptake questions
(t 5 23.08, p,0.01) and open questions (t 5 22.79, p,0.01), and they answered
more questions (t 5 22.17, p,0.05). We performed this analysis (comparing the
two key stages) for the whole-class section of the literacy hour and found similar
results, with the addition that KS1 teachers spent more time on reading than the
KS2 teachers during the whole-class part (t 5 2.05, p,0.05).
In Figure 2, it is interesting to compare the analysis of the whole-class part of the
lesson (ignoring the plenary part) with the group-based section when teachers are
working with a group of pupils with SEN.
A t-test found significant differences between the discourse in the group part with
pupils with SEN and the whole-class section of the literacy hour. The biggest
differences (all significant at p,0.001) were as follows:
N More explaining, reading, repeat, open and uptake questions during the whole-
class part;
N More direction and more teacher answers during the group part.
Figure 2. Comparison of discourse profiles for whole-class and group parts of the literacy hour
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 305
Our findings, therefore, suggest teachers exercised a more directing influence over
the talk when working with a group of pupils with SEN. It was assumed that by
working with a smaller number of pupils, teachers would relax their directing
influence over the talk, thereby providing more opportunities for pupils to initiate
ideas, ask questions and to elaborate on their answers. In fact, we found teachers
tended to use lower cognitive interactions, with fewer challenging questions and
sustained interactions with pupils.
We also investigated the impact of setting upon the discourse in the classroom as
26% of the schools had adopted it as a strategy for teaching pupils with SEN within
the literacy hour. We grouped classes into whether they were mixed, lower set,
middle set or upper set. Looking first at the entire literacy hour (not just the whole-
class part), we found that setting affected the amount of uptake questions asked and
the amount of writing by the teacher (see Figure 3).
A one-way ANOVA test was used, followed by the Bonferroni post hoc test.
Teachers teaching an upper set were significantly more likely to ask uptake questions
than those teaching a lower set or a mixed set (nine uptake questions to an upper set
compared to 2.2 to a lower set or 2.6 to a mixed class). The amount of writing by the
teacher was also higher with the upper sets.
Figure 4 shows the discourse profile for only the whole-class part of the literacy
hour. The same pattern remains for the uptake questions. In addition, open
Figure 3. Comparison of discourse profiles across class setting—entire literacy hour (LH)
Figure 4. Comparison of discourse profiles across class setting—whole-class part only
306 F. Hardman et al.
questions were more common in the upper set classrooms compared to the lower
sets and mixed ability classes. Refocusing was significantly higher in the lower set,
and infrequent in the upper set.
The class percentage of pupils with SEN and the percentage of boys in a class had
no effect upon the discourse that took place in whole-class teaching.
Pupil discourse
Table 2 shows the most common forms of discourse used by the pupils across all 70
lessons. When pupils spoke it was to answer a question (86% of the time). Reading
was the next most common activity (10%). Pupils therefore rarely asked questions or
offered information.
As discussed earlier, for the purposes of our observation we focussed upon the
four pupils identified by the teacher as having the greatest problems in literacy in
order to compare their interactions with the teacher to that of the rest of the class.
We can see from Figure 5 that our four pupils with SEN (the focal pupils)
contributed 20% of the time to the lesson. Considering these four pupils constitute
only a small part of the class (typical size 25), this is a higher proportion than
Table 2. Discourse profile for all pupils during whole class teaching
Behaviour Frequency Percentage (%)
Open question 17 0.3
Closed question 53 1.0
Explain 75 1.4
Answer 4468 85.7
Read 534 10.2
Write 65 1.2
Total 5212 100
Figure 5. Contributions to the lesson by type of pupil (SEN, other or whole class)
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 307
expected. Although the contributions were mainly made up of responses to teacher
questions like that of their peers, it was also found that pupils with SEN asked three
times as many questions as the other pupils. However, the results could have been
affected by fact that the teachers knew we were focusing on the pupils with SEN,
what Labov (1994) calls the observer’s paradox. It should also be remembered that
the pupils with SEN would have contributed via the whole-class route.
Setting and teacher effectivesness had no impact upon the number of answers
offered by the pupils with SEN, other pupils and whole class. However, key stage did
make a difference. Figure 6 shows the differences in rate of answers offered per hour
by key stage. In KS1, pupils with SEN offered significantly more answers per hour
than KS2 pupils with SEN (t 5 2.19, p,0.05). Also in KS1, whole-class answers
were more frequent than in KS2 (t 5 2.91, p,0.01).
Evaluations of pupils’ answers
In the three-part, IRF structure, when a pupil has given an answer to a question, the
teacher can then evaluate this answer with praise, acceptance, criticism or a further
probe. Our analysis showed that the majority of evaluations of answers were
acceptances (57%). The teachers offered praise 21% of the time, probed for another
answer (from the same pupil) 14% of the time and rarely criticized an answer (7%).
(see Table 3). It can be seen that the amount of criticism and probing during the
literacy hour varied considerably between teachers. Teacher effectiveness, setting
arrangements, class percentage of pupils with SEN, class male percentage and time
of day had no effects upon answer evaluations. However, key stage did: KS1 teachers
significantly praised more than KS2 teachers (t 5 4.60, p,0.001). Where as KS1
teachers praised 26% of all answers, this dropped to 17% for KS2 teachers.
Figure 6. Differences across key stage in terms of number of answers offered by different pupils
308 F. Hardman et al.
We investigated answer evaluations further to see if teachers used different kinds
of evaluations depending upon who the answer came from: a pupil with SEN, an
‘other’ pupil, or the whole class (Figure 7). We found a large significant difference
between the amount of acceptances according to the receiver: the figure of 57%
increases to 87% if the answer originates from the whole class. It seems that the
higher impact evaluations are reserved for individual pupils: a whole-class answer
receives praise only 6%, probes 6% and criticism 1% of the time. A GLM repeated
measures test was used to investigate this (F 5 95.12, p,0.001).
Teachers also used more probes with pupils with SEN than with ‘other’ pupils
(F 5 19.19, p,0.001). With pupils with SEN teachers probed 16.9% of the time,
compared to 12.6% of the time with ‘other’ pupils. Teacher effectiveness had no
impact upon the type of answer evaluations given by teachers to pupils with SEN,
other pupils or the whole class. Similarly, key stage and setting had no effect.
Discourse analysis
A sub-sample of 10 lessons (five KS1/five KS2) was analysed using discourse
analysis. The discourse analysis framework provided a clear and systematic basis for
Figure 7. Amount of acceptances according to type of pupil
Table 3. Amount of evaluations offered per hour
Minimum Maximum Mean SD
Praise 3 65 21.66 13.83
Accept 20 142 56.92 25.61
Criticise 0 28 6.91 5.89
Probe 0 101 15.96 16.17
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 309
analysing the classroom discourse in all 10 lessons and for triangulating the results
with the computerized systematic observation data. Analysing the patterning of the
teaching exchanges in whole-class and group-based activities provided a useful
means of further exploring the discourse strategies used by the teachers. In addition
to analysing the teaching exchanges, we also explored and quantified the teachers’
use of open and closed questions, uptakes and probes in response to pupils’ answers,
and the length of pupil utterances.
The transcript analysis shows there was little overall variation in the patterning of
the teacher exchanges used by the 10 teachers as they taught the whole class and
while working with a group of pupils with SEN. Teacher explanation and teacher-
directed question-and-answer make up the majority of discourse moves in all 10
lessons accounting for 80% of the total teaching exchanges. The discourse analysis
revealed the rapid pace of teachers’ questioning and the predictable sequence of
teacher-led recitation in which the parts are nearly always being played out as
teacher–pupil–teacher. Pupils’ responses were often evaluated and commented on
by the teacher who maintained the right to determine what was relevant within his/
her pedagogic agenda. Teacher-directed interrogation of pupil knowledge and
understanding was therefore the most common form of teacher–pupil interaction,
with teacher questioning rarely going beyond the recall and clarification of
information.
The following example, shown in Table 4, taken from a Year 2 (6/7 years of age)
lesson exploring spelling patterns, is typical of the patterning of teaching exchanges
used by all 14 teachers.
Table 4 illustrates clearly the teacher’s pervasive use of the three-part exchange
and the elaborate nature of many of her sequences of elicits which are chained
together to form a lengthy transaction. The extract in Table 4 illustrates how the
teacher uses starter acts (Turns 1 and 11) as a matter of routine in opening moves.
These are similar in function to what Edwards and Mercer (1987) call ‘cued
elicitations’ and French and MacLure (1981) term ‘preformulations’ where she
provides advance warning that a question is imminent and provides some clues as to
how to answer it. Pupil responses are often brief and evaluated and commented on
by the teacher who has the right to determine what is relevant within her pedagogic
agenda. The sequence also shows the way in which teacher-directed talk of this kind
creates the impression of knowledge and understanding being elicited from the
pupils rather than being imposed by the teacher.
The sequence continues (Table 5) when Jack, a pupil with SEN, offers a word
which had been covered in the previous lesson. Initially, the teacher is reluctant to
digress from her agenda (Turn 3), but Jack persists (Turn 11) and she decides to
include it as a point of revision and to involve him in the lesson (Turn 13). We also
see the teacher probing Jack’s answers (Turns 16 and 19).
Again, the extract in Table 5 illustrates the rapid pace of teacher questioning
within the IRF sequence leaving little time for reflection on the topic under
discussion. The flow of the dialogue mainly consists of elicitation sequences,
initiated and controlled by the teacher through turn-allocation procedures that
310 F. Hardman et al.
identify and regulate speakers within the classroom action, and evaluation of pupil
answers.
There was little variation in teacher discourse style when working with a group of
pupils during the 20 minute guided reading and writing activities, although there
was more teacher direction and closed questions. Teachers therefore exercised close
control over the nature, pace and direction of the knowledge pursued in the lessons,
regardless of whether it was with the whole class or group of children, thereby
supporting the computerized systematic observation data which suggests that the
teaching was mainly interrogative and directive in nature.
The length of pupil utterances was also analysed to explore to what extent pupils
were encouraged to elaborate on their answers. Overall, we found that pupils were
providing answers that were three words or fewer for 80% of the time. Pupil
Table 4. Teacher-Pupil exchanges
Exchanges Moves Acts
Turn 1 T right Fr m
I’m going to change just one letter in that word there or
I would like somebody to try and do it for me try and
change one letter in that word silly me I’m pointing to
it change it and see if you can make
another word s
would anyone like to try Amy el/n
2 P coil R rep
3 T good girl Amy F e
4 T which letter am I going to change then I el
5 P n (chorus) R rep
6 T the n for the l F e
7 T would you like to come and write it please
I’m wondering Amy if you could write it just a bit
bigger so that the other children can see good girl
I d
8 T now somebody else with another one I el
Rebecca n
9 P foil R rep
10 T foil oh right F e
so we’re going to leave the ending the same com
11 T and what are we going to do this time I s
we’re going to which letter are we going to change
this time
el
12 P the c R rep
13 T that’s right we’re going to change the beginning aren’t we I e
14 T would you like to come and write that down for me
Rebecca
I el
15 P (non verbal) R rep
16 T good girl F e
Note: the moves: Initiation, Response, Feedback, make up the three-part teaching exchange which
in turn are made up of acts: com 5 comment; d 5 direct; e 5 evaluation; el 5 elicitation; i 5 inform;
rep 5 reply; s 5 starter; m 5 marker; n 5 nominate. Frame (Fr) indicates a transition in the lesson.
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 311
contributions were therefore rarely sustained or extended to encourage higher
cognitive interactions. Comparison between whole-class and group-based teaching
showed some variation in the type of questions asked and the length of pupil
utterance. When working with a group of pupils with SEN, teachers asked fewer
open-ended questions (an average of 12% of all questions asked) compared to
whole-class teaching (an average of 18%) and only 15% of responses were more than
three words long. Therefore the transcript analysis suggests that the teachers tended
to use fewer challenging questions when working with special needs pupils, which in
turn encouraged fewer sustained responses. However, the analysis of the transcripts
showed some of the teachers encouraged higher levels of pupil participation and
engagement through open questions and different use of the follow-up move.
Through feedback which went beyond evaluation of the pupil’s answer (i.e. probing
and the use of uptake), teachers sometimes extended the answer to draw out its
Table 5. Teacher–pupil exchanges
Exchanges Moves Acts
1 T yes Jack I el
2 P Troy R rep
3 T Troy yes that was an interesting word that wasn’t it F e
4 T shush shush Georgia thank you good girl well done I d
5 T my goodness you’re getting very good at this aren’t you I s
Natasha n/el
6 P boil R rep
7 T boil right F el
8 T so which one are we going to change this time I el
9 P the f R rep
10 T the f for a b good girl F e
11 P miss can I write Troy down I el
12 T you can write Troy down in a moment Jack R rep
13 T and maybe you can tell me what we
talked about that word yesterday thank you I s
right come on Jack you can write that word down for me d
now what should it have to start with el
14 P t R rep
15 T that’s right it needs that F e
16 T but what sort of a letter are we going to use I el
17 P capital R rep
18 T you need a capital good boy F el
19 T why do we need the capital for it Jack I el
20 P because it’s a name R rep
21 T it’s a name right F e
22 T would you like to write it down for us please I el
23 P (non verbal) R rep
24 T good boy Jack well done thank you F e
Note: See footnote to Table 4.
312 F. Hardman et al.
significance, or to make connections with other contributions during the lesson topic
so as to encourage greater pupil participation.
Conclusion and implications
The paper set out to investigate teacher–pupil dialogue with pupils with SEN in the
literacy hour. While such pupils appear to actively participate in whole-class and
group-based talk, their contributions, like that of their peers, are often limited to
answering teacher questions in which recall and clarification of information
dominate. Teacher-led recitation therefore seeks predictable answers and only
rarely are teachers’ questions used to assist pupils to more complete or elaborated
ideas, to build on pupil ideas, or to provide diagnostic feedback to pupil answer.
This finding is supported by recent studies of whole-class talk in the NLS (Mroz
et al., 2000; Hardman et al., 2003; Moyles et al., 2003).
We also found that teachers were replicating their whole-class, teacher-led
recitation strategy when working with a group of pupils with SEN; however, there
was even more teacher direction and closed questions, thereby closing down
opportunities for higher pupil engagement and initiations. This finding is supported
by Skidmore et al.’s (2003) study of guided reading and writing where it was found
teachers were replicating whole-class discourse patterns: teachers did most of the
talking, asked mainly closed questions, and tightly managed the turn taking and
direction of the talk. Similarly, when pupils with SEN were placed in a lower set, the
discourse was more directional and less cognitively demanding, with fewer open and
uptake questions.
Key stage also made a difference to teacher–pupil dialogue: Reception and KS1
teachers were found to be even more directive in their teaching, asking twice the
number of closed questions compared to KS2 teachers, leading to fewer sustained
interactions and lower levels of cognitive engagement. This finding may have been
influenced by the greater emphasis on word level objectives (i.e. vocabulary,
phonics, spelling) which we observed at Reception and KS1 and is an area in need of
further investigation. It should not be assumed, however, that the teaching of word
level objectives will necessarily lead to direct instruction in which the teacher takes
an active role and pupils respond passively. As Ehri et al. (2001) discuss, phonics can
be taught using a variety of active approaches. This is a view endorsed in government
training materials where it states ‘phonics can and should be taught in interesting
and active ways that engage young children’s attention, and that are relevant to their
interests and build on their experiences’ (DfES, 2001b, p. 4).
Overall, our findings suggest that traditional patterns of whole-class interaction
have not been dramatically transformed by the NLS. Such ‘top-down’ curriculum
initiatives, while bringing about a scenario of change in such things as inclusion,
curriculum content, lesson structure, teacher planning, assessment and record
keeping, often leave deeper levels of pedagogy untouched. Traditional patterns of
teacher–pupil interaction persist, with teacher questioning only rarely being used to
assist pupils to articulate more complete or elaborated ideas as recommended by
Teaching of pupils with SENS in the NLS 313
government training materials (DfEE 1999a, 1999b, 1999c, 2000a, 2000b, 2001a,
2001b). The findings also raise questions about the effectiveness of the in-service
training programmes that have accompanied the NLS. As Alexander (2000) argues,
they point to the need for different approaches in order to change habitual classroom
behaviours and traditional discourse patterns. Earl et al. (2003) also suggest that
changing such pedagogic understanding and practices remains a major challenge in
securing the long-term effectiveness of the strategies.
Moyles et al. (2003) suggest that in order to bring about changes in traditional
patterns of whole-class teaching, there is a need for greater reliance upon teachers
developing, through their own experience and reflection, their own personal views
of good practice. Similarly, Joyce (1992) argues that teachers need extended
opportunities to think through new ideas and to try out new practices, ideally in a
context where they get feedback from a more expert practitioner and continue to
refine their practice in collaboration with colleagues. Monitoring and self-evaluation
therefore need to become a regular part of in-service training, thereby giving teachers
a degree of ownership of the process of school improvement. Coaching and talk-
analysis feedback may be useful tools for professional development whereby
sympathetic discussion by groups of teachers of data (recordings and transcriptions)
derived from their own classrooms could be an effective starting point for critical
reflection. Such an approach could provide supportive interactions with peers
through modelling and feedback in order to change traditional patterns of whole-
class and group-based interaction necessary for responsive teaching. Our findings
also suggest a need for further research into ways of effectively supporting teachers in
their professional development in order to promote more reciprocal forms of
teaching and to provide comprehensive evidence that more active pupil involvement
in classroom discourse can produce significant gains in learning.
Acknowledgement
The authors wish to thank the Nuffield Foundation for funding the research
discussed in this article.
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