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Mary Phillips Manke - Classroom power relations: understanding student-teacher interaction

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This book is based on a careful theorizing of classroom power relations that sees them as constructed from the actions of all participants. Contrary to the common assumption that the teacher is the source of classroom power, it sees that power as arising from the interaction between students and teachers. If power is owned by the teacher, she is completely responsible for events in the classroom, whether or not she chooses to share her power/control/authority with the students. If, as this book claims, power is the joint creation of all participants, teachers are freed from an excessive and damaging weight of responsibility for classroom events and outcomes. The shared responsibility between students and teachers for what happens in the classroom is brought to light. Based on an ethnographic study of three elementary classrooms, this book offers a careful look at the workings of classroom power. It is of interest both to those seeking to understand power relations from this theoretical viewpoint and to those whose concern is with the daily workings of classrooms, often called classroom management. Questions explored in this book include: * How do teachers organize time and space in classrooms as part of their contribution to the development of classroom power relations? * What kinds of discourse choices do they make, and why? * How do students contribute to defining what will count as classroom knowledge, and how do they resist teacher agendas as they play their part in constructing classroom power relations?

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title Classroom Power Relations Understanding Student-teacher - photo 1

title:Classroom Power Relations : Understanding Student-teacher Interaction
author:Manke, Mary Phillips.
publisher:Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
isbn10 | asin:0805824960
print isbn13:9780805824964
ebook isbn13:9780585189741
language:English
subjectTeacher-student relationships--United States--Case studies, Interaction analysis in education--United States--Case studies, Classroom environment--United States--Case studies.
publication date:1997
lcc:LB1033.M2123 1997eb
ddc:371.102/3
subject:Teacher-student relationships--United States--Case studies, Interaction analysis in education--United States--Case studies, Classroom environment--United States--Case studies.
Page iii
Classroom Power Relations
Understanding Student-Teacher Interaction
Mary Phillips Manke
Mankato State University
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers
1997 Mahwah, New Jersey London
Page iv
Copyright 1997 by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any
form, by photostat, microfilm, retrieval system, or any other
means, without the prior written permission of the publisher.
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc., Publishers
10 Industrial Avenue
Mahwah, New Jersey 07430
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Manke, Mary Phillips.
Classroom power relations : understanding student-teacher
interaction / Mary Phillips Manke.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-8058-2496-0 (pbk. : alk. paper)
1. Teacher-student relationshipsUnited StatesCase stud
ies. 2. Interaction analysis in educationUnited StatesCase
studies. 3. Classroom environmentUnited StatesCase stud
ies. I. Title.
LB1033.M2123 1997 97-12619
371.102'3dc21 CIP
Books published by Lawrence Erlbaum Associates are printed on acid-free paper, and their bindings are chosen for strength and durability.
Printed in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
Page v
CONTENTS
Preface
vii
Chapter 1
Introduction
1
Part I: Narratives of Classroom Life
Chapter 2
Sunny Kaminski's First-Grade Classroom: A Typical Readers' Workshop Time
19
Chapter 3
Aileen Corvo's Fifth-Grade Classroom: A Typical Language Arts Period
31
Chapter 4
Sue Anderson's Fifth Grade Classroom: A Sample Language Arts Period
46

Page vi
Part II: Teachers and Students Constructing Power Relations
Chapter 5
Teachers' Organization of Time and Space: One Aspect of Classroom Power Relations
63
Chapter 6
"Sally, Would You Like to Sit Down?" How Teachers Use Politeness and Indirect Discourse
75
Chapter 7
Defining Classroom Knowledge: The Part That Students Play
92
Chapter 8
Students in Conflict with Teachers' Agendas: Interactive Contributions to Classroom Power Relations
106
Chapter 9
How Is It Useful to Look at Classrooms in This Way?
126
Appendix: Exploring Ideas about Power Relations in Classrooms
140
References
164
Author Index
167
Subject Index
169

Page vii
PREFACE
This book is written for teachers, future teachers, and teacher educators, in the hope that it will be useful to them as they consider how students and teachers together construct their lives in classrooms.
Based on an ethnographic study of three elementary classrooms, the book reflects my understanding and interpretation of power relations as I observed them. It is centered on a constructivist view of power relations, not as brought into classrooms from the outside world, by the teacher or anyone else, but as created inside classrooms through the actions of teachers and students that take place every day.
As I worked with the data I had collected and as I applied the concepts I was developing to thinking about my own teaching, I understood more clearly the potential usefulness of the view of power relations I was forming. In every classroom, whether or not the teacher is trying to share power, control, or authority with the students, students participate with teachers in developing the classroom's power relationsthe set of local rules that determines what teachers and students can actually do in that classroom. In a political world in which teachers are constantly held responsible for every outcome of classroom life, this concept has promise for helping teachers perceive their classrooms as places in which they and the students are working together, and are jointly responsible for outcomes. This realistic basis for understanding classroom life can be helpful to teachers, and perhaps reduce some of the stress that comes from taking sole responsibility for what happens in their classrooms.
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