by stevelouw » 01 Oct 2019 10:26
I would argue that a teacher's exchanges with students are not nearly as predictable as the IRF structure would make things seem. In a 'perfect' classroom, or one where a teacher has almost dictatorial control over students, students might just answer questions asked. However, in my experience student responses are seldom that predictable. Sometimes they joke, or respond in their L1, ask a question back, or don't respond at all. If the teacher's questions are simply resulting in highly predictable student responses, is it possible that there is no new learning taking place? (Or is my dialogic lens clouding my perspective?)
The analogy that springs to mind after reading about air traffic controllers is the case of air-strewards. They go around and say 'Tea or coffee?' over and over, and respond predictably to the passenger's responses to the question. This could be automated perhaps. But like the bank tellers, they also have non-predicable responses to their questions, like 'Could I have tea and coffee in the same cup please?', and they also need to respond to individual passenger requests like 'My baby's eardrum has burst' or 'Could I move to another seat because the man in 27B is harassing me'. It strikes me that the 'Tea of coffee' question is a small part of their interaction with the passengers. Similarly, the predictable IRF interaction with students is only a very small part of a teacher's communication - especially if they are actually interacting with the students as they are learning rather than just following a script to get through the lesson.
If the elicitation transactions are automated, could that not simply be seen as some form of online testing?