1997
DOI: 10.2307/329302
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On Discourse, Communication, and (Some) Fundamental Concepts in SLA Research

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Cited by 269 publications
(385 citation statements)
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“…A holistic view of reading research involving verbal reports will require us to dismantle dichotomies that adopt a single perspective, and instead look towards an approach where sociocultural and cognitivist approaches are both used to explain how LLs talk about their thinking during reading. This recommendation is aligned with the reconceptualisation of research in SLA proposed by Firth and Wagner (), who called for an extension of examinations of language use and acquisition beyond cognitivist perspectives towards orientations that foregrounded the social and contextual factors involved in this process.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
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“…A holistic view of reading research involving verbal reports will require us to dismantle dichotomies that adopt a single perspective, and instead look towards an approach where sociocultural and cognitivist approaches are both used to explain how LLs talk about their thinking during reading. This recommendation is aligned with the reconceptualisation of research in SLA proposed by Firth and Wagner (), who called for an extension of examinations of language use and acquisition beyond cognitivist perspectives towards orientations that foregrounded the social and contextual factors involved in this process.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…Beyond this, a more complex qualitative–quantitative–qualitative approach seems inadequate even when researchers use solely cognitivist approaches and information‐processing models. As discussed earlier, in the field of applied linguistics, and considering the work of Firth and Wagner () that acknowledged the need for examining language use and acquisition within the social contexts in which they are situated, it is possible to consider the socially situated nature of verbal protocols in data collection, transcription and analysis within the context of verbal reporting that focuses on literacy processes (see Deschambault, ). Researchers are already experimenting with sociocultural approaches to collecting and analysing verbal reports for the purposes of assessing culturally and linguistically diverse learners in areas such as cognitive interviewing and field methods (e.g.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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