This article describes a longitudinal ethnographic research project in a Grade 1 classroom enrolling L2 learners and Anglophones. Using a community-of-practice perspective rarely applied in L2 research, the author examines three classroom practices that she argues contribute to the construction of L2 learners as individuals and as such reinforce traditional second language acquisition perspectives. More importantly, they serve to differentiate participants from one another and contribute to community stratification. In a stratified community in which the terms of stratification become increasingly visible to all, some students become defined as deficient and are thus systematically excluded from just those practices in which they might otherwise appropriate identities and practices of growing competence and expertise.
This articlereportson a qualitativemultiplecase studythatexplored the academicdiscoursesocializationexperiencesof L2 learnersin a
Canadian Groundedin thenotionof of university. "community prac-
tice"(Lave&Wenger1,991,p.89),thestudyexaminedhowL2learners
negotiatedtheirparticipationand membershipin theirnewL2 class-
roomcommunities, in classdiscussionsT.he particularly open-ended
included6female studentfsrom and10of participants graduate Japan
theircourseinstructorSst.udent interviewasn,dclassroom self-reports,
observationwserecollectedoveran entireacademicyeartoprovidean
ofthestudents' abouttheir in-depthl,ongitudinaalnalysis perspectives
classparticipationacrossthecurriculumT.hreecase studiesillustrate
thatstudentsfaced a major challengein negotiatingcompetence,
identities,and power relations,which was necessaryfor them to
and be as and membersof participate recognized legitimate competent
theirclassroomcommunitiesT.he studentsalso attemptedto shape
theirown learningand participationby exercisingtheirpersonal
and their whichwere agency activelynegotiating positionalities, locally
constructedin a classroom. forclassroom
given Implications practices
and futureresearchare also discussed.
This paper analyses the contribution of student agency and teacher contingency in the construction of classroom discourse in adult English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) classes for refugees and asylum seekers, for whom the identity of student itself can constitute a stable point in a highly unstable and potentially threatening lifeworld. In contrast to accepted ideas of the prevalence of teacher-initiated initiation–response–feedback (IRF) sequences in whole group teacher-fronted activity, characteristic student- initiated moves for bringing the outside into classroom discourse are identified. These are discussed in terms of the student agency and teacher contingency involved, drawing on the Bakhtinian notion of “answerability.”: teacher and students are robustly claiming interactive space in classroom talk, bringing the outside into discussion. This data, drawn from narrative and classroom data in case studies of Adult ESOL classrooms, points to less docile more agentive and open-ended models of classroom discourse than have typically been evidenced in the literature.