Applying Linguistic Ethnography to Educational Practice: Notes on the Interaction of Academic Research and Professional Sensibilities

Adam Lefstein, Mirit Israeli

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

Abstract

Academic concepts, methods and research knowledge are often criticised as irrelevant or useless for addressing problems of educational practice. Liat, a full-time Science teacher and part-time Masters student, expressed this sentiment in a recent seminar on ‘Discourse, Teaching and Learning’: ‘I’m four years into this degree [programme] and the academic world is truly irrelevant to that of the educational system. It’s all bullshit: research, research, research. Nothing at all relevant to schools, nothing.’ (We have translated this and all other quotations from the workshops from Hebrew; the original transcripts are available upon request.) This chapter is about our attempt to address this challenge by introducing educational practitioners to linguistic ethnographic research of classroom practice.
Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationLinguistic Ethnography
Subtitle of host publicationInterdisciplinary Explorations
EditorsJulia Snell, Sara Shaw
Pages187-206
ISBN (Electronic)9781137035035
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2015

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