2017
DOI: 10.1177/1461445617701992
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Closing seminars and lectures: The work that lecturers and students do

Abstract: Based on an analysis of naturally occurring interactions between lecturers and students, this article investigates how university lectures and seminars are brought to a close through the collaborative work of lecturers and students. The analysis focuses on: firstly, the resources that lecturers and students have to accomplish this (which do not just include speech, but also embodied conduct, as well as references to clock time and lesson phases); secondly, the active role that students play, who may engage in … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The result was not consistent with next following reported works, (Gibbs and Taylor, 2016;Stanton, 1979;Braskamp, Caulley and Costin, 1979), who argued that there is a significant positive relationship between lecturer feedback and academic progress of students. The result was consistent with following reported works (Hartney, 2007;Tyagunova and Greiffenhagen, 2017;McCarthy, 2017), who argued that there is not a significant positive relationship between lecturer feedback and academic progress of students. In conclusion hypothesis # 1: There is a positive linear correlation between individual study work and students' academic success, is been rejected.…”
Section: Descriptive Analysissupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The result was not consistent with next following reported works, (Gibbs and Taylor, 2016;Stanton, 1979;Braskamp, Caulley and Costin, 1979), who argued that there is a significant positive relationship between lecturer feedback and academic progress of students. The result was consistent with following reported works (Hartney, 2007;Tyagunova and Greiffenhagen, 2017;McCarthy, 2017), who argued that there is not a significant positive relationship between lecturer feedback and academic progress of students. In conclusion hypothesis # 1: There is a positive linear correlation between individual study work and students' academic success, is been rejected.…”
Section: Descriptive Analysissupporting
confidence: 92%
“…This shows how the participants adapt their early finish and readiness‐to‐leave to avoid disrupting the classroom environment. The packing away of belongings is what Tyagunova and Greiffenhagen (2017) refer to as “gearing up” to leave. As they “gear up,” Sara and Kimi orient to the classroom environment by continuing to engage in English interaction together.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In institutional contexts, activities are often scheduled with predetermined end points, minimizing the need for pre‐closing sequences (Greer, 2019). Nonetheless, institutional interactions do not necessarily finish on time, and participants in classrooms still need to work to achieve closings (Tyagunova & Greiffenhagen, 2017). A practice used by students in university lectures, for example, is the packing away of belongings as a move toward closing, which Tyagunova and Greiffenhagen (2017) refer to as "gearing up" to leave.…”
Section: Closingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…what Garfinkel (2002, p. 105) termed "instructed actions" or, in this study, "instructed experience". Recently there have been studies available in EMCA literature on how students orient to a range of instructive phenomena related to the opening and closing of university lectures and seminars (Garfinkel, 2002;Tyagunova & Greiffenhagen, 2017), to the manipulation of telescopes in astronomical observatories (Marques et al 2020), to the identification of 'learnables' during surgery at a teaching hospital (Zemel & Koschmann, 2014) and to the joint accomplishment by teachers and very young students of everyday activities such as pretend play episodes, managing disputes and talking about the environment (Bateman, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%