Show/Hide Menu
Hide/Show Apps
Logout
Türkçe
Türkçe
Search
Search
Login
Login
OpenMETU
OpenMETU
About
About
Open Science Policy
Open Science Policy
Open Access Guideline
Open Access Guideline
Postgraduate Thesis Guideline
Postgraduate Thesis Guideline
Communities & Collections
Communities & Collections
Help
Help
Frequently Asked Questions
Frequently Asked Questions
Guides
Guides
Thesis submission
Thesis submission
MS without thesis term project submission
MS without thesis term project submission
Publication submission with DOI
Publication submission with DOI
Publication submission
Publication submission
Supporting Information
Supporting Information
General Information
General Information
Copyright, Embargo and License
Copyright, Embargo and License
Contact us
Contact us
Epistemic positioning and knowledge-building in postgraduate neuroscience classroom interaction
Download
Epistemic positioning and knowledge-building.pdf
Date
2024-10-01
Author
Bozbıyık, Merve
Morton, Tom
Metadata
Show full item record
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
.
Item Usage Stats
27
views
7
downloads
Cite This
This article explores the dynamics of epistemic positioning and knowledge-building in classroom interaction in two postgraduate neuroscience classrooms. Using an interdisciplinary approach combining multimodal Conversation Analysis and Legitimation Code Theory (LCT), it examines how lecturers and students negotiate epistemic stance and status through interactional practices, and how these practices legitimise certain stances or “gazes” in relation to doing neuroscience. Drawing on six hours of video-recorded classroom interaction, the study uses detailed transcripts to uncover the epistemic positioning practices of two lecturers teaching modules on neurobiological bases of psychiatric disorders and addiction. The interactional data are reanalysed from the knowledge-building perspective of LCT, revealing that the two lecturers were operating different specialization codes and activating different gazes in terms of the social relations of both themselves and their students as knowers. The analyses demonstrate how slight shifts in interactional practices around epistemic positioning can have significant consequences for legitimating different knower positions in postgraduate neuroscience education. By combining micro-analysis with the sociological framework of LCT, the study offers insights into the complex dynamics of knowledge-building in advanced academic settings and offers tools for reflection on and enhancement of teaching practices in postgraduate science education contexts.
Subject Keywords
Epistemic positioning
,
Knowledge-building
,
Legitimation Code Theory
,
Multimodal conversation analysis
,
Specialization
URI
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85203540372&origin=inward
https://hdl.handle.net/11511/111156
Journal
Journal of Pragmatics
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pragma.2024.08.009
Collections
Department of Foreign Language Education, Article
Citation Formats
IEEE
ACM
APA
CHICAGO
MLA
BibTeX
M. Bozbıyık and T. Morton, “Epistemic positioning and knowledge-building in postgraduate neuroscience classroom interaction,”
Journal of Pragmatics
, vol. 232, pp. 72–90, 2024, Accessed: 00, 2024. [Online]. Available: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85203540372&origin=inward.