Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context

Symbolic competence (Kramsch, 2009, 2011) has been proposed as a crucial addition to world language learning, as it enables a language learner to negotiate the complex symbolism of words, expressions, and discursive events from the target culture in order to reference them effectively and in the app...

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Main Author: Michele Back
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2016-01-01
Series:L2 Journal
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8pf7781b#main
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spelling doaj-8f23960415a74c45bf92d9a05f1054852020-11-24T22:09:52ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaL2 Journal1945-02221945-02222016-01-0183122Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring ContextMichele Back0University of ConnecticutSymbolic competence (Kramsch, 2009, 2011) has been proposed as a crucial addition to world language learning, as it enables a language learner to negotiate the complex symbolism of words, expressions, and discursive events from the target culture in order to reference them effectively and in the appropriate contexts. However, fostering symbolic competence is still a challenge within the day to day reality of the world language classroom. Moreover, there is still little research on what symbolic competence looks like in interaction. In this article I examine a peer tutoring context as one possibility for examining symbolic competence in interaction. Using a close discourse analysis of one peer tutoring session, I explore the intersections between interactional resources and the performance of symbolic competence. I show how the peer tutor’s enthusiastic and lengthy descriptions of a Mexican television program from the 70s constituted what I term a symbolic performance of her knowledge of this cultural artifact. At the same time, the peer learner’s reactions to these explanations, particularly her increasing lack of alignment, revealed resistance and interactional asynchrony between the two individuals. I examine reasons for this asynchrony, focusing on the difficulties of fostering symbolic competence in traditionally communicative-based language learning environments despite the potential richness that a peer tutoring environment could provide for transformative language learning. I suggest ways in which symbolic competence could be cultivated in peer tutoring and other additional language learning contexts.https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8pf7781b#main
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michele Back
spellingShingle Michele Back
Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context
L2 Journal
author_facet Michele Back
author_sort Michele Back
title Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context
title_short Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context
title_full Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context
title_fullStr Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context
title_full_unstemmed Symbolic Competence in Interaction: Mutuality, Memory, and Resistance in a Peer Tutoring Context
title_sort symbolic competence in interaction: mutuality, memory, and resistance in a peer tutoring context
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series L2 Journal
issn 1945-0222
1945-0222
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Symbolic competence (Kramsch, 2009, 2011) has been proposed as a crucial addition to world language learning, as it enables a language learner to negotiate the complex symbolism of words, expressions, and discursive events from the target culture in order to reference them effectively and in the appropriate contexts. However, fostering symbolic competence is still a challenge within the day to day reality of the world language classroom. Moreover, there is still little research on what symbolic competence looks like in interaction. In this article I examine a peer tutoring context as one possibility for examining symbolic competence in interaction. Using a close discourse analysis of one peer tutoring session, I explore the intersections between interactional resources and the performance of symbolic competence. I show how the peer tutor’s enthusiastic and lengthy descriptions of a Mexican television program from the 70s constituted what I term a symbolic performance of her knowledge of this cultural artifact. At the same time, the peer learner’s reactions to these explanations, particularly her increasing lack of alignment, revealed resistance and interactional asynchrony between the two individuals. I examine reasons for this asynchrony, focusing on the difficulties of fostering symbolic competence in traditionally communicative-based language learning environments despite the potential richness that a peer tutoring environment could provide for transformative language learning. I suggest ways in which symbolic competence could be cultivated in peer tutoring and other additional language learning contexts.
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8pf7781b#main
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