Emotions and classroom management
Authors
Santamaría García, M. CarmenPublisher
Universidad de Alcalá. Servicio de Publicaciones
Date
2016-01-01Funders
Project “EMO-FUNDETT: EMOtion and
language 'at work': The discursive emotive/evaluative FUNction in DiffErent Texts and contexts
within corporaTe and institutional work”, I+D FFI2013-47792-C2-1-P, sponsored by the Spanish
Ministry of Science and Innovation
Bibliographic citation
Litzler, M.F., J. García Laborda y C. Tejedor Martínez (eds.). Beyond the universe of languages for specific purposes: the 21st century perspective. Alcalá de Henares: Universidad de Alcalá, 2016, p. 27-31
Keywords
Classroom atmosphere
Discourse analysis
Pragmatics
Politeness
Appraisal
Evaluation
Classroom management
Project
FFI2013-47792-C2-1-P (Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación)
Document type
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
Version
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)
Access rights
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Abstract
This article explores the emotional consequences of (im)politeness and evaluative language in teacher-student interaction at higher education level together with their influence in learning. In recent years, we have been experiencing an increase in students' challenging attitudes. There seems to be a direct relationship between a good atmosphere in the classroom and an increase in students' and teacher' performances. Therefore, it will be in teachers and students" interest to foster a positive classroom environment, which will hopefully result in a cooperative atmosphere of beneficial effects. I will focus on the expression of attitude (affect and feelings), judgement and
appreciation following appraisal theory (Bednarek 2008, Martin and White 2000, 2005, Hunston and Thompson 2000, Thompson and Alba-Juez 2014), and combining it with politeness theory (Brown and Levinson 1987), considering revisions of the model (Eelen 2001, Lakoff and Ide 2005, Locher
and Watts 2005, Spencer-Oatey 2002, Watts 2003, Watts, Ide and Ehlich 2005), and further exploration in (im)politeness (Bousfield 2011, Culpeper 2011). My data have been extracted from real class sessions. The methodology for processing the data borrows techniques from Corpus Linguistics (CL), and combines its typically quantitative approach with the more qualitative one by Conversation Analysis (CA) and Discourse Analysis (DA), as done in previous research (Santamaría García 2011, 2013, 2014). Results stress the importance that teachers and students develop sensitivity towards the language they use when interacting (in the classroom or virtual settings), as the interaction generated has effects not only on the relations created among them but on the teaching- learning process.
Files in this item
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Files | Size | Format |
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Emotions_Santamaria_2016.pdf | 178.6Kb |
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