Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went

Educational research into classroom discourse over the course of the last four decades has documented the prevalence of teacher talk and control; questions are predominantly closed or factual, students' responses often do not exceed three words, and teachers’ feedback is mainly about correctnes...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Juliano Camillo, Leonardo Gonçalves Lago, Cristiano Rodrigues de Mattos
Format: Article
Language:Portuguese
Published: Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná 2022-04-01
Series:Revista Brasileira de Ensino de Ciência e Tecnologia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://periodicos.utfpr.edu.br/rbect/article/view/14802
_version_ 1828155476660977664
author Juliano Camillo
Leonardo Gonçalves Lago
Cristiano Rodrigues de Mattos
author_facet Juliano Camillo
Leonardo Gonçalves Lago
Cristiano Rodrigues de Mattos
author_sort Juliano Camillo
collection DOAJ
description Educational research into classroom discourse over the course of the last four decades has documented the prevalence of teacher talk and control; questions are predominantly closed or factual, students' responses often do not exceed three words, and teachers’ feedback is mainly about correctness. However, there is increasing evidence that through dialogue students can learn more about the topic under study, retain the learning gains for longer times, and develop reasoning skills. These findings have been transformed into strategies to promote educational dialogues, making them richer and meaningful. Since this approach is not widely embraced in Brazilian public schools, we planned a classroom-based intervention focused on the development of teachers’ dialogic practices facilitated by a school-based teacher professional development program. In March of 2020, when the first workshop was ready to be conducted, the pandemic arrived in Brazil and demanded the closure of all schools. In this paper, we reflect on what happened to classroom dialogue during the pandemic. First, a brief review of the highly unequal conditions to access internet and computers, basic means of the new educational platform, is presented. Second, based on interviews with two teachers and data from the municipality, we discuss, through the lenses of dialogical education, the school practice during pandemic times and how teachers have been facing the situation and portraying solutions to interact with students. Finally, through our analysis of schooling in the pandemic, we propose an expansion of the notion of monologue and dialogue to include more than verbal interactions. We argue that the concrete conditions of pandemics promptly impose a monologic model of education, despite all teacher's efforts to promote more interactions and dialogue.
first_indexed 2024-04-11T22:54:27Z
format Article
id doaj.art-687f25c328cb40c38e7c28a5a60ad0ff
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1982-873X
language Portuguese
last_indexed 2024-04-11T22:54:27Z
publishDate 2022-04-01
publisher Universidade Tecnológica Federal do Paraná
record_format Article
series Revista Brasileira de Ensino de Ciência e Tecnologia
spelling doaj.art-687f25c328cb40c38e7c28a5a60ad0ff2022-12-22T03:58:29ZporUniversidade Tecnológica Federal do ParanáRevista Brasileira de Ensino de Ciência e Tecnologia1982-873X2022-04-0115110.3895/rbect.v15n1.148026598Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never wentJuliano Camillo0Leonardo Gonçalves Lago1Cristiano Rodrigues de Mattos2Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Santa Catarina.Universidade de Cambridge, Cambridge.Universidade de São Paulo, São Paulo, São Paulo.Educational research into classroom discourse over the course of the last four decades has documented the prevalence of teacher talk and control; questions are predominantly closed or factual, students' responses often do not exceed three words, and teachers’ feedback is mainly about correctness. However, there is increasing evidence that through dialogue students can learn more about the topic under study, retain the learning gains for longer times, and develop reasoning skills. These findings have been transformed into strategies to promote educational dialogues, making them richer and meaningful. Since this approach is not widely embraced in Brazilian public schools, we planned a classroom-based intervention focused on the development of teachers’ dialogic practices facilitated by a school-based teacher professional development program. In March of 2020, when the first workshop was ready to be conducted, the pandemic arrived in Brazil and demanded the closure of all schools. In this paper, we reflect on what happened to classroom dialogue during the pandemic. First, a brief review of the highly unequal conditions to access internet and computers, basic means of the new educational platform, is presented. Second, based on interviews with two teachers and data from the municipality, we discuss, through the lenses of dialogical education, the school practice during pandemic times and how teachers have been facing the situation and portraying solutions to interact with students. Finally, through our analysis of schooling in the pandemic, we propose an expansion of the notion of monologue and dialogue to include more than verbal interactions. We argue that the concrete conditions of pandemics promptly impose a monologic model of education, despite all teacher's efforts to promote more interactions and dialogue.https://periodicos.utfpr.edu.br/rbect/article/view/14802dialoguedialogical educationpandemics
spellingShingle Juliano Camillo
Leonardo Gonçalves Lago
Cristiano Rodrigues de Mattos
Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went
Revista Brasileira de Ensino de Ciência e Tecnologia
dialogue
dialogical education
pandemics
title Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went
title_full Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went
title_fullStr Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went
title_full_unstemmed Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went
title_short Monological education and pandemic: the return of those who never went
title_sort monological education and pandemic the return of those who never went
topic dialogue
dialogical education
pandemics
url https://periodicos.utfpr.edu.br/rbect/article/view/14802
work_keys_str_mv AT julianocamillo monologicaleducationandpandemicthereturnofthosewhoneverwent
AT leonardogoncalveslago monologicaleducationandpandemicthereturnofthosewhoneverwent
AT cristianorodriguesdemattos monologicaleducationandpandemicthereturnofthosewhoneverwent