Practices for dispreferred responses using no by a learner of English
-
John Hellermann
Abstract
Responding in a manner that does not align with an action or affiliate with a stance implicated in just prior talk is potentially sensitive work. Conversation Analysis (CA) has shown that participants orient to the sensitive nature of sequences of talk used to project responses that do not align, or, are dispreferred (Pomerantz, Agreeing and disagreeing with assessments: Some features of preferred/dispreferred turn shapes, Cambridge University Press, 1984) in some way. This paper examines such responses, especially with the use of no tokens. The talk comes from the interactions of one adult learner of English in a language learning classroom over the course of five ten-week terms. The findings show that the participant's use of no (for other-correction, third-position repair, and multiple sayings) is oriented to by peers as appropriate for the classroom community of practice. Learning, it is suggested, may be seen in the learner's orientation to the preference for affiliation when doing negative responses.
©Walter de Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Language learning, cognition, and interactional practices: An introduction
- Locating cognition in second language interaction and learning: Inside the skull or in public view?
- Learning talk analysis
- Doing being a foreign language learner in a classroom: Embodiment of cognitive states as social events
- Practices for dispreferred responses using no by a learner of English
- Doing not being a foreign language learner: English as a lingua franca in the workplace and (some) implications for SLA
Articles in the same Issue
- Language learning, cognition, and interactional practices: An introduction
- Locating cognition in second language interaction and learning: Inside the skull or in public view?
- Learning talk analysis
- Doing being a foreign language learner in a classroom: Embodiment of cognitive states as social events
- Practices for dispreferred responses using no by a learner of English
- Doing not being a foreign language learner: English as a lingua franca in the workplace and (some) implications for SLA