ABSTRACT

This book explores the use of online and face-to-face interactions in language teacher education (LTE) by assessing the formation and practices of a community of practice (CoP), and evaluating the roles discussions between student teachers and a peer tutor can play in terms of identity formation, articulating narratives, reflective practices, and maintaining affective relationships. The specific context within which this is embedded is a Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) programme, often known as English Language Teaching (ELT), at a third-level Irish institution. The data drawn on come from student teachers on a master’s (MA) programme who interacted with a peer tutor (the researcher) via a number of modes (face-to-face and online). The approach to data analysis is a corpus-based discourse analytical one, which examines the linguistic features of student teacher and peer tutor talk; the features of CoP practices in the discourse; and how different modes of communication shape the nature of this discourse. Perceptive data from the student teachers is used to outline their reactions to the modes of communication and the activities they participated in.

chapter 1|19 pages

Introducing the Context

LTE, Social Learning, and CoPs

chapter 2|18 pages

Technologies in LTE

chapter 3|23 pages

Corpus-Based Discourse Analysis

chapter 4|52 pages

Community Discourse

Frequent Linguistic Features

chapter 5|40 pages

Community Discourse

Identity Formation and Representation

chapter 6|47 pages

Community Discourse

Affective Relationships

chapter 7|12 pages

Conclusions