“My very own mission impossible”: an appraisal analysis of student teacher reflections on a design and technology project
-
James Mackay
und Jean Parkinson
Abstract
A post-structuralist perspective suggests that our social context will lead to lasting ways of viewing the world, which will be reflected in what we think, say, and write. This study aims to test whether gendered expectations of success in a technological task are reflected grammatically in reflections on the task. Eighty-seven teacher trainees built and electrically wired a doll house as a class assignment. Their written reflections on this experience were analyzed using the appraisal framework, which allows analysis of expression of emotion (affect), assessment of behavior (judgment), and assessment of artifacts (appreciation). The grammar of male students' writing reflects a comparatively positive experience of the task. A greater proportion of the interpersonal content of the male students' compared to the female students' reflections was devoted to a positive assessment of the doll's house and the course (appreciation). Female students' reflections gave more attention to negative appraisal of their own emotions (affect) and actions (judgment), indicating that gendered experience is indeed encoded in the grammar of the reflections. We interpret our findings as reflecting the anxiety and diffculty of achieving a task when we ourselves and others in our social context expect us not to be able to achieve that task.
© 2009 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG, D-10785 Berlin
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- Exploring the use of rhetorical questions in editorial discourse: a case study of Arabic editorials
- “Just wondering if you could comment on that”: indirect requests for information in corporate earnings calls
- Appraisal in evangelical sermons: the projection and functions of misguided voices
- A quantitative perspective on the minimal definition of narrative
- “My very own mission impossible”: an appraisal analysis of student teacher reflections on a design and technology project
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- Index of articles in Volume 29 (2009)
Artikel in diesem Heft
- Exploring the use of rhetorical questions in editorial discourse: a case study of Arabic editorials
- “Just wondering if you could comment on that”: indirect requests for information in corporate earnings calls
- Appraisal in evangelical sermons: the projection and functions of misguided voices
- A quantitative perspective on the minimal definition of narrative
- “My very own mission impossible”: an appraisal analysis of student teacher reflections on a design and technology project
- Thematic progression of children's stories as related to different stages of cognitive development
- Arrival stories: dialogical analyses of performed tolerance in narrative
- Index of articles in Volume 29 (2009)