This qualitative study examined emerging inquiries and dialogue of five- to six-year-old
kindergartners (9 boys and 9 girls) taking place around computers as they engaged in a
mapping project in a technology-rich classroom in the U.S. Discourse analysis of young
children’s conversations in a technology-rich classroom shed light on their perceptions
of computer-based technology as a learning tool. Key findings revealed: (a) cumulative
talk patterns among the children evolved into exploratory talk; (b) children’s thinking,
questioning, and talking was purposeful, reflective, and autonomous; (c) children’s speech
and dialogue influenced their emergent technological literacy skills; (d) peer collaboration
and teacher input scaffolded student development; and (e) students discovered personal
preferences in using various tools.
Description
Taylor & Francis Online :: Kindergartners’ Conversations in a Computer-Based Technology Classroom - Communication Education - Volume 54, Issue 2
%0 Journal Article
%1 doi:10.1080/03634520500213397
%A Hyun, Eunsook
%A Davis, Genevieve
%D 2005
%J Communication Education
%K 2014_E852 collaborative-talk discourse exploratory-talk ict kindergarten scaffolding
%N 2
%P 118-135
%R 10.1080/03634520500213397
%T Kindergartners’ Conversations in a Computer-Based Technology Classroom
%U /brokenurl#www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03634520500213397
%V 54
%X This qualitative study examined emerging inquiries and dialogue of five- to six-year-old
kindergartners (9 boys and 9 girls) taking place around computers as they engaged in a
mapping project in a technology-rich classroom in the U.S. Discourse analysis of young
children’s conversations in a technology-rich classroom shed light on their perceptions
of computer-based technology as a learning tool. Key findings revealed: (a) cumulative
talk patterns among the children evolved into exploratory talk; (b) children’s thinking,
questioning, and talking was purposeful, reflective, and autonomous; (c) children’s speech
and dialogue influenced their emergent technological literacy skills; (d) peer collaboration
and teacher input scaffolded student development; and (e) students discovered personal
preferences in using various tools.
@article{doi:10.1080/03634520500213397,
abstract = {This qualitative study examined emerging inquiries and dialogue of five- to six-year-old
kindergartners (9 boys and 9 girls) taking place around computers as they engaged in a
mapping project in a technology-rich classroom in the U.S. Discourse analysis of young
children’s conversations in a technology-rich classroom shed light on their perceptions
of computer-based technology as a learning tool. Key findings revealed: (a) cumulative
talk patterns among the children evolved into exploratory talk; (b) children’s thinking,
questioning, and talking was purposeful, reflective, and autonomous; (c) children’s speech
and dialogue influenced their emergent technological literacy skills; (d) peer collaboration
and teacher input scaffolded student development; and (e) students discovered personal
preferences in using various tools.},
added-at = {2014-12-08T00:27:09.000+0100},
author = {Hyun, Eunsook and Davis, Genevieve},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/29cd588ec03b3e008808ef3c2ba0a8313/ssalnave},
description = {Taylor & Francis Online :: Kindergartners’ Conversations in a Computer-Based Technology Classroom - Communication Education - Volume 54, Issue 2},
doi = {10.1080/03634520500213397},
eprint = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03634520500213397},
interhash = {cf9f4864718e4920ea8689c1992a1d50},
intrahash = {9cd588ec03b3e008808ef3c2ba0a8313},
journal = {Communication Education},
keywords = {2014_E852 collaborative-talk discourse exploratory-talk ict kindergarten scaffolding},
number = 2,
pages = {118-135},
timestamp = {2014-12-08T00:27:09.000+0100},
title = {Kindergartners’ Conversations in a Computer-Based Technology Classroom},
url = {/brokenurl#www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/03634520500213397},
volume = 54,
year = 2005
}