THE STUDY OF TURN-TAKING PATTERN IN TEACHER-STUDENT INTERNAOTION :A CASE STUDY OF AN ENGLISH CLASSROOM AT SMA LABORATURIUM UPI BANDUNG

ABSTRACT This study entitled The Study of Turn-Taking Patterns in Teacher-Student Interactions aims to describe the nature of turn-taking patterns in teacher-student interactions, to explore in what occasion the students got turns to speak, and to see whether the students got the turns through self-...

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Main Author: Nita Wahyuningtyas, - (Author)
Format: Book
Published: 2009-08-20.
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100 1 0 |a Nita Wahyuningtyas, -  |e author 
245 0 0 |a THE STUDY OF TURN-TAKING PATTERN IN TEACHER-STUDENT INTERNAOTION :A CASE STUDY OF AN ENGLISH CLASSROOM AT SMA LABORATURIUM UPI BANDUNG 
260 |c 2009-08-20. 
500 |a http://repository.upi.edu/93616/1/s_c0351_055018_chapter3.pdf 
500 |a http://repository.upi.edu/93616/2/s_c0351_055018_chapter5.pdf 
500 |a http://repository.upi.edu/93616/1/s_c0351_055018_bibliography.pdf 
520 |a ABSTRACT This study entitled The Study of Turn-Taking Patterns in Teacher-Student Interactions aims to describe the nature of turn-taking patterns in teacher-student interactions, to explore in what occasion the students got turns to speak, and to see whether the students got the turns through self-initiation. The subjects of the study were an English teacher and 40 students of an English classroom at 11th grade of a senior high school in Bandung. The data were collected through video recordings of five English lessons, classroom observations, and interviewing the teacher. The data collected were analyzed by applying Allwright's (1980) model focusing on classroom interaction. The findings show that the majority turns were made by the teacher (80.20%). The teacher made the majority of the turns by giving personal solicits (48.76%). The rest of the turns made by the teacher were through giving general solicits (28.71%), making terminal intonation markers (1.73%) and fading out (0.90%). Meanwhile, the students made 19.80% out of the total turns by making terminal intonation markers (9.65%), making personal solicit (4.21%), making general solicit (3.22%) and fading out (2.72%). Regarding to the description about turn-giving distribution above, it reveals that the highest turns taken by the students were through responding to personal solicits (23.15%). Additionally, the lesser turns taken by the students were by responding to general solicits (12.16%). Furthermore, the turns taken by the students through self-initiation were the least among the former turns (8.97%). On the other hand, the teacher took 48.19% out of the overall turns. The most frequently turns were taken by the teacher through self-initiated moves (42.84%). Overall, teaching in the classroom often provided the students opportunities to speak, however in some occasions they had missed the turns to speak (6.51%). The study concludes that the students have lack of readiness to learn the language by participating through self-initiation. 
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