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Oxford, R., Massey, R.., & Anand, S. (2005). Transforming PDF

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Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page1 TransformingTeacher-StudentStyleRelationships: TowardaMoreWelcoming andDiverseClassroomDiscourse RebeccaOxford RebeccaMassey SupreetAnand NOTE:Aslightlyabridgedversionofthispaperwaspublishedas: Oxford,R.,Massey,R..,& Anand,S.(2005).Transformingteacher-studentstylerelationships: Towarda morewelcominganddiverseclassroomdiscourse.InJ.Frodesen&C.Holten,Eds.,Thepowerofcontextin languageteachingandlearning(pp.249-266).Boston:Thomson/Heinle. Consciousnessbecomesconsciousness...onlyintheprocessofsocialinteraction.Bakhtin(TheBakhtinReader,1994,p.52) Our goal is to weave Mikhail Bakhtin’s key concepts into a theoretical framework that illuminates L2 teacher-studentstyle harmonyandconflict. Here “L2” refers to both second and foreign language settings.1 AlthoughL2educationwasnotpartof Bakhtin’s portfolio, his linguistic and literary theories are applicable to L2 teacher-studentstylerelationships.Turningthe BakhtinianspotlightontoL2styleharmonysituations,wedemonstratehowhisideasofdiscourse,heteroglossia(different voices),centrifugality,andcentripetalityworktogetherintheclassroom,justastheydoinlanguageitself. ObservingL2style conflictthroughaBakhtinianlens,weuncovertheneedforanenhanced,enrichedL2classroomdialoguethatismorediverse, moreheteroglossic,andmoreacceptingofmultiplelearningstylesandcultures. Themainquestionshereare:WhatkindofdiscoursepervadesanL2classroomwherestyleharmonyexists betweenteacherandstudent?Whosevoicesemergeandhow?HowisdialoguedifferentinanL2classroomwhere styleconflictisfrequent?HowdopowerandintimacyrelatetoL2teacher-studentstylerelationships?HowcanL2 styleclashesbetransformedintoatrulymulti-voiceddiscoursethatempowersallparticipants?Answerstothese questionscomefromnarrativeswrittenbyparticipantsinanewstudy,whichisthemostrecentinvestigationinaseriesof qualitativeresearchstudiesonL2styleharmonyandstyleconflict.2Thefirsthalfofthispaper(PartA)providesatheoretical frameworkonlearningstyles,teachingstyles,L2styleharmonyandstyleconflict,andBakhtinianconcepts.Thesecondhalf (PartB)presents the methodology of this study, applies Bakhtin’s theories to specific L2 teacher-studentstylenarratives, andgivesrecommendationsfortransformingtheL2classroomviaamorediverse,morestyle-acceptingformofdiscourse. PartA:TheoreticalFramework LearningStyles Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page2 Learningstylesarethegeneralapproachespreferredbythestudentwhenlearninganewsubjectortacklingadifficult problem (Oxford, Ehrman, & Lavine, 1991; Oxford, 2001a). These styles are “the overall patterns that give generaldirection to learning behavior” (Cornett, 1983, p. 9). “Learning style is the biologically and developmentally imposed set of characteristics that make the same teaching method wonderful for some and terrible for others” (Dunn & Griggs, 1988, p. 3). In a larger perspective, learning style is the person’s authentic essence or identity in any of the social contexts of learning. Learning style involves the person’s favored ways of receiving, processing, remembering, and retrieving information; understandingthelearningtask;comingtogripswiththeoryandpractice;acceptingoravoidingresponsibilityforlearning; and dealing with others in the classroom. It also includes the complex “thinking-feeling-knowing-being” matrix that motivates learningbehavior. Learningstylesarenotdirectlyobservablebutareinferredfromwhatpeopledowhilelearningorwhat theysaywhentalkingaboutlearning,e.g.,ininterviews,style-conflictessays,orstylesurveys. Personalvariables,suchasinterests,goals,achievementmotivation,affiliationmotivation,age,gender,andgenetics, playacrucialroleinthedevelopmentoflearningstyle.Infact,somestyleexpertsemphasizepersonalvariablesalmost exclusively,eventothepointofassumingthatlearningstyleisaninborn,virtuallyunalterabletraitoftheindividual–as thoughthepersonlivedinahermeticallysealedbubble. Yetnobodyislockedintoaparticularlearningstylewithnoroom for growth or change. Individuals’ learning styles may evolve throughencounterswithmanydifferentpeople,educational systems,andbeliefs(seesocialcontextsbelow).Afewindividualsexperiencesignificant,sharpstylechangesaftera trauma or a major life experience. Finally, “style stretching,” as described inthediscussionsection,isanimportantmeansof expandingstylepossibilities. Socialcontextsclearlyinfluencelearningstyle(Dunn,1991;Nuby&Oxford,1997;Oxford,2002b;Oxford&Anderson, 1995;Oxford,Hollaway,&Murillo,1992;Reid,1987,1995,1998). Socioculturalinfluencesonlearningstyleinclude:(a) beliefs and attitudes about teaching and learning within one’s own “large culture”(suchasFrench,British,orsomemajor subsetoftheselargecultures);(b)beliefsandattitudesaboutteachingandlearningdevelopedthroughexperienceswith otherlargecultures,e.g.,throughstudyingabroad,travelingasatourist,makingfriendswithpeoplefromothercultures,and evenwatchinginternationaltelevisionandfilms;and(c)beliefsandattitudes about teaching and learning within a “small culture,” i.e., any coherent social grouping, no matter how small, such as a family, a church, a class, a teacher-studentor tutor-tuteerelationship,anongoingstudy-partnerrelationship,oraneveningstudycircle.Beliefsandattitudesmaynotbe overtly expressed, conscious, or internally consistent; nevertheless, they typically influence the student’s learning Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page3 preferences. Twentytofortydimensionsoflearningstylehavebeenidentifiedbyvariousexperts(see,e.g.,Ehrman&Leaver, forthcoming;Oxford,1990;Oxford&Anderson,1995;Reid,1998;Shipman&Shipman,1985).Manylearningstylemodels exist,sometimesconflicting.Thisistypicalofaburgeoningfieldbutalsoreflectsthecomplexityoftheconstruct,i.e., learningpreferencesandprocesses,whichthemodelsareattemptingtodescribe(Reid,1998).Herewefocusonlearning styleaspectsmostfrequentlyfoundinthenarrativediscoursesamplesinthisstudy.Sensorylearningstyledimensions includevisual,auditory,andhands-on(i.e.,kinestheticandtactile). Cognitivelearningstylesincludetwolargeclusters: specificity-seeking andgenerality-seeking. Thespecificity-seekingclustercoversthesefourdistinctlydifferentdimensions: item-focused,analytic,concrete-sequential,anddifference-sharpening.Thegenerality-seekingclusterencompassesthese fourdistinctdimensions:holistic,synthesis-oriented,intuitive-random,anddifference-blurring. Affectiveandsociallearning styledimensionsinclude:extrovertedvs.introverted,thinkingvs.feeling,andclosure-orientedvs.open. Seetheappendix forcompletedefinitions. TeachingStyles Teachingstylereferstothetotalityofinstructionalactivities,methods,andapproachestheteacherpreferstouseandis most comfortable using. In a broader view, teaching style involves the teacher’s ways of thinking, feeling, believing, and knowinginthemanysocialcontextsofinstruction.Itisinferredfromwhatinstructorsdowhileteachingorwhattheysay aboutteaching. Teachingstylerelatestomanyinstructionaldecisions,suchaspresentingatopic,pacingactivities,creating lessons,organizingcurricula,choosingmaterials,structuringtasks,providingtaskdirections,establishingtheimplicitor explicitclassroompowerstructure,respondingtoerrors,arrangingseats,gradingassignments,designingtests,rewarding performance,handlingdiscipline,groupingstudents,advisingstudents,formingoravoidingbonds,andseekingoravoiding feedbackfromstudents. Beliefsandattitudes,oftenculturallyandexperientiallyinfluenced,helpshapeteachingstyle.Teachersinevitably choose presentation modes and activities they believe “make the most sense,” i.e., seemgoodeitherforthestudentsorfor themselvesasteachers.Someteachersteachthewaytheylearnedbestinschool;inthiscase,teachingstylereflects learningstyle.Othersadopttheteachingstyleofaninstructortheybelievedtobeinspiring(Kinsella,1995).Stillothers intentionallyemployteachingstylestheyabhorredaslearnersbutthatnowofferinstructionalcontrol. Ineachcase, instructionalpreferencesarebasedonbeliefs,stemmingfromexperiencesinspecificsocioculturalsettings. Yetthese Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page4 beliefsmaynotleadtooptimalinstructionforallofthediversestudentsinanygivenclassroom. Teachingstylemaybecategorizedusingthesamedimensionsaslearningstyle:sensory,cognitive,andaffective/ social(seeaboveandalso the appendix). As an example, Mr. Dadour might be termed an “analytic, extroverted, closure- oriented,andvisual” teacher. PartBofthispaperfrequentlyusesthisbasicterminologyfordescribingteachingstyles,butit goesbeyondthisterminologyaswell. Adifferentperspectiveinvolvesthree“macro” teachingstyles,autocratic,democratic/participatory,andlaissez-faire, whichemergedfromnarrativesinanearlierstudy(Oxford,2001b). Thesethree“macro” stylesreflectvariouscombinations oftwokeyvariables,powerandintimacy.Inreanalyzingthedata,Oxford(2002a)foundthefollowing:  Positiveelementsofclassroompower:(a)status,praise,recognition,andprestige;(b)learnerautonomy,self-regulation,and empowerment;(c)competence and agency, i.e., being an agent in one’s own success;and(d)usefulguidanceandauthority.  Negativeaspectsofclassroompower:(a)tyranny,dictatorship,orautocracy;(b)ridiculeorsarcasm;(c)insuperablesocial distancebetweenteacherandstudent;(d)manipulationthroughbribery,flattery,andintimidation.  Positiveaspectsofteacher-studentintimacy:(a)friendship,bonding,orappropriatesocialcloseness;(b)supportorhelp;(c) mutualcommunication;and(d)alearningalliance(Ehrman,1996;Ehrman&Dörnyei,1998;Freire,1993)withteacherand studentasco-learners.  Negativeaspectsofteacher-studentintimacy,whichreflectedwarpedpower:(a)inappropriatesocialcloseness,(b)favoritism, and(c)oversexualizedteacher-studentrelationships. In Oxford’s (2001b) study, autocraticteachingprovedtobeveryhighonteacherpower,lowonpositiveintimacy,with someaspecfsofnegativeintimacy.Democratic/participatoryteachingwashighonpositiveintimacyandhighonvarious formsofpower-sharingbetweenteacherandstudent.Laissez-faireteachingshowedlittlepowerorintimacyatall;teachers werelargelydetatchedfromthesituation,thesubject,andthestudents. Teacher-StudentStyleHarmonyandStyleConflict Whena learner’s style is similar to the teacher’s style, both learner and teacher generally feel quite comfortable in the learningenvironmentandsatisfiedwiththeactivitiesandinstructionalapproaches(Dunn&Dunn,1979;Oxford,Ehrman,& Lavine,1991). Thisisonetypeofstyleharmony.Anothertypeofstyleharmonyconsistsofthestyle-aware teacher’s consciousprovisionofstyle-relatedvarietyininstructionalactivities;inthisway,everystudentreceivesinstructionthatis relevanttohisorherlearningstyle. Problemsmayarise,however,when(a)thereisamismatchofteacherandlearner styles,causingastyleconflict;and(b)inthisstyleconflictsituation,theteacherisnotawareofwhatishappeningand/or doesnottrytovaryclassroom activities to meet learners’ style needs. This confluence of variables provokes learner anxiety andsometimesevenateacher-student “style war” (Oxford, 1998; Wallace & Oxford, 1992). The learner may respond negativelytotheteacher,thelanguageandculturebeinglearned,orthelanguageprogram,sometimeswithdisastrous Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page5 results. “There may be severe loss of learning efficiency and even inability to learn” (Ehrman, 1996, p. 54). The student may accusetheteacherfornotmeetinghisorherneeds,whiletheprogramortheteachermaylabelthestudentas “problematic,” or a poor language learner. Bakhtin’s Most Relevant Theories for L2 Education Now we explain Bakhtin’s literary and linguistic concepts of polyphony, heteroglossia, dialogue, centripetality,and centrifugality,allofwhichhaveimplicationsfortheL2classroom. PolyphonyandHeteroglossia Bakhtin’s concept of polyphony(multiplesounds)predatesbutisrelatedtohistheoryofheteroglossia(differingvoices). ToBakhtin,polyphonyis a central feature of novels like Dostoevsky’s. The polyphonic novel repositions “the idea of the novel, its truth, within multiple and various consciousnesses rather than a single consciousness” and repositions the novel’s author “alongside the characters as one of these consciousnesses, creator of the characters but also their equal . . .” (Zappen,2000,p.11).Severalautonomousconsciousnessescombineinto"ahigherunity,aunity,sotospeak,ofthe secondorder,"like"thecomplexunityofanEinsteinianuniverse"(Bakhtin,1984,p.16).Inapolyphonicnovel,the charactersare"freepeople,capableofstandingalongside,"agreeingordisagreeingwith,andsometimesrebellingagainst, theircreator(Bakhtin,1984,p.6).Thesecharactersare"notonlyobjectsofauthorialdiscoursebutalsosubjectsoftheir owndirectlysignifyingdiscourse,"andtheybecome"agenuinepolyphonyoffullyvalidvoices"(Bakhtin,1984,pp.6-7).The polyphonyofvoicesisadesirablegoalfortheL2classroom. Markersofinternaldifferentiationandstratificationpresentineverylanguage(includingdifferentdialects, societal-levelindicators,subculturalvocabulary,idioms,jargon,slang,andpersonalcommunicationstyles)make upwhatBakhtintermsheteroglossia(Bakhtin,1998). ForBakhtin,theappropriationofanywordinanylanguage is not a neutral process. Instead, the language learner is confronted with words that are “already populated with the social intentions of others” (Bakhtin, 1998, p. 36). Becauseeachusageofawordrequiresittobeadopted fromitspreviouscontext,theninfusedwithnewmeaninginitsnewcontext,itisalwaysintheprocessofre- creation--halfinthemouthofthepastspeakerandhalfinthemouthofthepresentspeaker.Sortingthroughthe variedmeaningsandconnotationsofothersispartoftheprocessofappropriation, revealing that “[even] one’s Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page6 ownlanguageisneverasinglelanguage:inittherearealwayssurvivalsofthepastandapotentialforother- languagedness” (Bakhtin, 1988, p. 143). Paradoxically, the same elements in any language that continually fragmentitalsokeepitaliveandgrowing.Anylanguageisheteroglossic,engorgedwithamultiplicityofvoices, tones,contextualnuances,andculturalandideological tensions. Wong’s (1994) interpretation of Bakhtin’s heteroglossia is that multiple possiblities of meanings exist within any utterance, and “we must search for multiple voices not only in our ESL students, but in ourselves as . . . teachers” (p.106). Anyindividualcanintentionallylearntoventriloquate(atermusedbyBakhtin)avarietyofvoices,suchasasexist voice,adeferentialvoice,aself-confidentvoice,andinfinitelymorevoices(Ivanic&Camps,2001).Notonlycanthestudent learntoexpressmanyvoicesoutwardly,butalsothestudentnaturallypossessesmanyinternalvoices.ThisiswhatBakhtin callsahiddendialogueorinternalheteroglossia.Justastheexternaldialogueconsistsofdifferentandsometimesclashing ideasandvoices,theinternaldialoguecontainsavarietyoffrequentlycontradictoryvoiceswhosemessagesmayormay not be coherently resolved. The internal dialogue is thus “a conversation of the most intense kind” (Bakhtin, 1984, p. 197). Learning one’s ownmothertongueinvolvesinteractingwiththevastarrayofvoicesinfluxwithinthatlanguage.Imagine howmuchgreatertheheteroglossiamustbeforanindividualengagedinlearninganotherlanguage.TheL2isnotastrictly unifiedsystemthatcanbetransmittedtothelearnerinitsentirety.Itisnotsomuchastaticobjectasanever-changing spacethatthelearnerentersinto,seekingtosimultaneouslydiscoverandcreateanewvoice. FortheL2learner,thismay beexperiencedattimesasanoverwhelming,exponentialheteroglossia. Borrowing from Bakhtin’s concept of heteroglossia, we define voice as the person’s self-expressionofidentity,aswell asthecomplexmatrixofbeliefsandattitudesbehindthatexpression.Weperceivevoicetobesociallysituatedratherthan isolatedortotallyidiosyncratic. Voicegrowsfromandisexpressedinparticularsocialandculturalcontexts,duringspecific events,andthroughinteractionwithparticularpeople.Intheseways,voiceandlearningstyleareverysimilar.Voiceis simultaneouslypersonalandsocialbecausediscourseissituatedinaparticularsocialcontext(Prior,2001). Dialogue To Bakhtin, “The entire life of language, in any area of its use . . . is permeated with dialogic relationships” (1984, p. 183). “To live means to participate in dialogue: to ask questions, to heed, to respond, to agree, and so forth. . . . [The person] investshis[orher]entireselfindiscourse,andthisdiscourseentersintothedialogicfabricofhumanlife,intotheworld Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page7 symposium” (Bakhtin, 1984, p. 293). Dialogue, as defined by Bakhtin, is “the single adequate form for verballyexpressing authentic human life” (1984, p. 293,emphasisinoriginal). Adialogueconsistsofutterancesthatoccurinaspecifichistoric timeandsocialsetting.Anutterancerespondsto,relieson,supplements,presupposes,refutes,oraffirmsearlierutterances (Bakhtin,1986). Anutterancenotonlylooksbackwardtopriorutterances,butitalsolooksforwardtoresponsivereactions fromtheotherperson(s)inthedialogue(Bakhtin,1986),whoarefreetoagree,disagree,andreactinavarietyofdifferent ways. Dialogicaldiscourse(alsoknownasdialogizedheteroglossia)involveslisteningtoeachvoicefromtheother’s perspective(Bakhtin,1998),thushelpingparticipantsexpressandnegotiatetheirindividualandculturaldifferences. Streufert (1998) takes this a step further, applying it to education: “With every move the teacher must be adaptive, interactiveandopentotherealstatusoftheheteroglotcollectivity of the class” (p. 13). He compares Bakhtin’s dialogical concepts to Freire’s (1993) liberatory co-learningconcept,inwhichteacherandstudentslearntogether.However,Stam (1988) argues, “The Bakhtinianformulationhastheadvantageofnotconstrictingliberatorystruggletopurelyeconomicor politicalbattles,extendingit[instead]tothesharedterritoryoftheutterance[indiscourse]....Bakhtinlocatesideological struggleatthepulsating heart of all discourse” (p. 123). Unlike Freire, Bakhtin pays close attention to the subjectivemind. CentripetalandCentrifugalForces Bakhtin(see,e.g.,1998)appropriatestheconceptsofcentripetalityandcentrifugalityfromphysicsandappliesthemto language.Centripetalmeansmoving(something)towardthecenter,andcentrifugalmeansmoving(something)awayfrom thecenter. Centripetalforcesbringorder,unification,andlimitstodiscourse(or,wemightadd,tothoughtoraction)by pullingittowardthecenter,thatis,towarduniformityandstasis,whilecentrifugalforcescreatediversityandcontrastin language(orthoughtoraction).Languageoperatesbothcentripetallyandcentrifugallyatthesametime. AsBakhtinnotes, everything we say participates in the centripetal, “unitary language” and simultaneously in the sociohistorical heteroglossia thatrelatestoaspecificplace,time,profession,genre,generation,andperson(Bakhtin,1998). Weturnnowtothesecond half,inwhich we apply Bakhtin’s theories to the teacher-studentstylenarratives. Part B: Applying Bakhtin’s Theories to L2 Style Narratives Methodology Thisstudyisthemostrecentofaseriesofinvestigationsinitiatedin1989bythefirstauthor,whowaslaterjoinedby colleaguesfromseveralpartsoftheworld. Inthissequenceofstudies,participantsincludedundergraduates,graduate Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page8 students,highschoolstudents,universityteachingassistants,andexperiencedK-12anduniversityteachers.Participants describedclassroomstyleconflicts(orstyleharmonysituations)fromtheirownexperiencesaslearners.Mostparticipants wrote essays in response to instructions such as: “Describe a language teacher, past or present, you especially disliked (or liked).” “Describe a language teacher with whom you have experienced significant conflict (or harmony).” “Talk about a languageclassroominwhichyoufeltuncomfortable (or comfortable).” “Describealanguageteacherwhomadeyoufeel unmotivated (or motivated).” Onlyafewteachersspokefromthepointofviewofateacher;mostfollowedthedirections carefullyanddescribedtheirownlearningexperiences. Socialdesirabilityresponsebias,i.e.,tellingtheresearcherwhatthe participantthoughtwasdesired,waskepttoaminimumthroughassurancesofconfidentiality.Participantsknewthattheir nameswouldbereplacedbynumericalcodesorpseudonyms;andiftheywereL2studentsatthetimeofthestudy,they wereassuredthatgradeswouldnotbeaffected.(Inthispaper,pseudonymsareused.) Theresearchserieshasalwaysbeenprimarilyqualitative(field-focused, interpretive, expressive of learners’ voices, anddetailed,Eisner,1991),althoughinsomestudiesstatisticalstyle-surveydataweregathered, along with the students’ narratives,forfurthervalidationofbothqualitativeandquantitativedata.Bynowmorethan600narrativesfrom16countries have been collected. The interpretive approach is that of “grounded theory.” In this approach, the theories(interpretations, themes,orhypotheses)arenotimposedinadvancebutinsteademergethroughiterativeexaminationofthedatabymultiple analysts,whocheckandcross-checktoverifyvalidityandreliability(Strauss,1987). Inthepresentstudy,theauthors coorperatively(althoughattimesseparatedbyhundredsofmiles)read,reread,andanalyzedmanynarratives,sharingtheir interpretations. This is a nonlinear, complex process based on “intensive, microscopic examination of the data to bringout the amazing complexity” therein (Strauss, 1987, p. 10). The current study’s narratives were mostly provided by dozens of highly experienced EFL teachers who took Oxford’s graduatecourse on “PrinciplesofLearnerAutonomy,Styles, and Strategies” intwouniversitiesinArgentinain2001. For purposesofcomparisonandcomprehensiveness,thispaperalsocontainssomeearlier(non-Argentinean)narratives.This paperentersintoaverynew,Bakhtinianinterpretivespace. Bakhtin’s work on the nature anduseoflanguagehelpsto illustrate the teacher’s inherently conflicted role in the classroom, thereby uncovering sources of confusion and frustration for bothteachersandstudents.Thestudyinvestigateshowstyleconflictscanbeacentralfactordeterminingmotivationand de-motivationintheL2classroom. Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page9 NarrativesShowingResultsofExtremelyCentripetalTeaching: LimitedDialogue,RestrictedHeteroglossia,NoPolyphony,andNoVoicefortheLearner Instructioninthecentripetalmodeisteacher-centered,i.e.,characterizedbyanauthoritarianorautocraticteacherwho exertsstrongcontroloverstudents.Basiccharacteristicsofthisapproachareteacherpower,uniformityoflanguageuse, and “one-size-fits-all” instruction (see the “autocratic approach” identified by Oxford, 2001b). The centripetal instructor generallybelievesthatthereisonlyonerightwaytoteachandappliesitwithgreatconsistencyandeven,attimes,rigidity. ThemostfrequenttypeofdialogueinthecentripetalclassroomisMagistral,basedonthemedievalscholastictraditionthat gaveallpowertotheteacherandnonetothelearner(Cheyne&Terulli,1999).Themaintenanceofthisasymmetryrequires theteachertobeinvestedwithauthoritybytheinstitutionortheculture.Thisestablishesalargesocialdistance,which reducesbonding,dialogue,heteroglossia,learnerself-expression,andanyopportunityfordemocraticpolyphony.Varieties ofverystrongcentripetalteachinginthenarrativesincluded:(a)theRoyalAcademySyndromethatHomogenizesand “Perfects” All Voices, (b) Massive Memorization orLecturewithoutHeteroglossia,(c)L2LaryngitisorTotalLossofVoice, and(d)TyrannyandtheBreakdownofHeteroglossia. ExtremelyCentripetalTeachingVariation (a): The Royal Academy Syndrome that Homogenizes and “Perfects” all Voices TheRoyalAcademySyndromeistheultra-centripetal mode that attempts to homogenize all voices into the single “right way” of speaking or writing. These teachers modelthelanguageinitsmosttraditionalorclassicform,ignoringtheflux, fission,andfusionofheteroglossiaandviewingerrorsandmistakesasunacceptable. Lucia,anArgentineEFLteacher, describedanundergraduateteacherofthisverycentripetalilk: This woman was very structured, almost dictatorial and pretended to be the owner of knowledge. I disliked the way she “imposed” concepts,madeusstudybyheartandlookeddownonus,Ifelt[e]speciallyonthestudentsofEnglish.Ifeltlikenotgoingtoclass mostofthetime,Iprobablycouldnothidemyfeelings-whichwouldusuallyshowonmyface-andlookedboredinclass.Ifoundit very hard to study the lists of accepted words in Spanish, rebelled against the “Spanish Royal Academy,” I read set bookswithout anypleasure(bookswhichIlaterfoundtobeveryinteresting!)AndIhadalwaysbeenanavidreader!TheResult=Iflunkedmy finalexam(andIwasverysurprised!)SoIhadtostudyeverythingagain,andthenexttimeIpassed.ItwasmyfirstAcademicfail. The teacher’s rigid, closure-orientedteachingstyleinspiredonlyboredomandresentmentinLucia.Thepredominantly concrete-sequential,item-focused,closure-orientedactivities,suchas“study[ing] the lists of accepted words in Spanish”were neitherstimulatingnorvaluable.Noanalyticalorsynthesizingskillswereinvolved.Thenegativelanguageusedtoreferto theinstructorandherteachingmethods(“almost dictatorial,”“owner of knowledge,” “ ‘imposed’ concepts”)indicatedastronglack ofdialogue,heteroglossia,andself-expression.Theconcrete-sequential, perfectionistic style, compounded by the teacher’s condescension,producedoppressionandfailureforthestudent. Oxford,Massey,andAnand,9/14/02,Page10 ExtremelyCentripetalTeachingVariation(b):MassiveMemorizationorLecturewithoutHeteroglossia Manynarrativescomplainedaboutthememorizationofandregurgitationofmassesofwordswithoutany communicativeuseofthesewords. Eduardo,anArgentineanEFLteacher,illustratedthissituation. Iwasattending High School (4th year), I was about 16 and I came across the most fearful Spanish language teacher I’ve ever met.. She taught us about the “Golden Age of Spanish Literature.” She asked the class to read piles of 12th-15thcenturiesrhymesand poemstoberecitedinclass.Besides,forthemid-termexamswewereexpectedtoproduceoriginalrhymesusingsituation, character,vocabularyandrhymethatwouldreflectthepoetryofthatperiod.Iremembermyselfspendingwholeweekendsbefore thoseteststryingtomemorizespecificvocabulary,jumblingsentencesthatwouldrhymeappropriatelyinanycontextIwouldhave tocreateonthespurofthemoment.EventhoughIgotgoodresultsIstilltodaythinkoftheworthlesseffortsthatIandtherestof theclassmade[...] Inthisnarrativetheteachingstylewastext-dependent,anextensionofthevisualstyle.Whilethisparticularactivity-- memorizingandrecitingpoemsandeventuallycreatingnewonestobememorizedandrecited–seemedtoreachoutto auditory-stylestudents,itdidnotpromoterealcommunication,creativity,orself-expression.Itwasprimarilyawayof showcasing students’ memorizing skills. Heteroglossia was limited by memorized, verbatim material,andjumbling sentencesthatweresupposedtorhymeatthespurofthemoment. Real dialogue, polyphony, and expression of one’s own voice were absent in these “worthless efforts.” ThesamepatternemergedinEgypt,whereNawla,anEgyptianEFLteachingcandidate,describedherworstEnglish teacherasanautocratwhowantedstudentstoactlikemachines–specifically,sewingmachines. “Hewantedtomakeuslike machines which sew words for one day.”Thissuggeststhattheteacherwantedthestudentstomemorizelistsofwordsthat wouldbesoonforgotten.Nawlafoundnoroomforcreative,intuitive,self-expressivedialoguewiththisteacher. Heteroglossiaandpolyphonywouldhavebeenbeyondtheimaginationofthisteacher. Whenverbatimmemorizationwastheprimarymode,thenanyotherformoflearningorexpression–evenamuch higherform,suchassynthesizing–wasusuallydisallowed.Mariela,averybright,synthesis-orientedArgentineanEFL teacher,illustratedthissyndrome. IfeltasenseoffrustrationforalongtimewhenIwasatprimaryschool.Manyteachersexpectedustostudyeverythingby[heart] andpraisedmemorizing.Iwasalwaysahard-workingstudentandtriedtodomybestbutrememberingabookwordforword,asit wasexpected,wasterribleforme.WhenIhadHistoryhomework,forexample,IrememberIlikedreadingeverything,connecting ideas,facts,politicalandeconomicalsituation[s]andotherfactorstogetthewholepictureofthehistoricaltimeIwasreadingabout, visualizingandsummarizingmainideas.Studentswhowroteexactlywhatwasinthebook,sameexpressions,words,verbs,etc., alwaysgotbettergradesthanIdid.IsometimesfelttherewassomethingwrongwithmylearningandthatIwasfarfromsmart. SomeyearslaterIunderstoodtherewasauniqueawayoflearningandthatteachers[knew]verylittleaboutlearningstyles. Thisstudentwasimpededbythestrictlyitem-focused,concrete-sequentialinstructionthatinvolvednosynthesisof information.Marielawantedtomakeconnectionsbetweensubjects,intuitmeaning,andseethelargercontextand“main

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NOTE: A slightly abridged version of this paper was published as: . and (d) a learning alliance (Ehrman, 1996; Ehrman & Dörnyei, 1998; Freire,
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