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Original Articles

Resistance as a resource for achieving consensus: adjusting advice following competency-based resistance in L2 writing tutorials at a British University

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Abstract

While a good deal of interaction-based research has examined the delivery of advice, a smaller but very important body of work has shifted focus to consider the ways in which advice is resisted by its recipients in various contexts, including writing tutorials at universities. The current study builds on this research by further investigating the interactional work undertaken from advice being resisted to participants reaching a joint consensus. This Conversation Analytic study draws from a collection of twenty-one one-to-one L2 writing tutorials for international students at a British university. When resisting the tutor’s advice, students reveal orientations towards their own levels of competency, providing self-deprecating resistance or high-competence-based resistance. Such responses become a resource for the tutor to diagnose problems and devise solutions better tailored to the needs of the particular recipient. In achieving a joint consensus, tutors rely on strategies such as adapting their initial advice for a less competent student and invoking broader forms of institutionally-preferred behaviours. Finally, this study discusses the importance of students’ knowledge and experience and how resistance can prompt the tutor to engage in important pedagogical work and to act as a ‘cultural informant’.

Notes

1. As this analysis is examining a series of four discreet actions, that have micro-components to each, the transcripts are somewhat extended.

2. Word families are defined as being ‘a base word, its inflected forms, and a small number of reasonably regular derived forms’ (Nation and Waring Citation1997: 7).

3. Quintana et al. (Citation2004) describe scaffolding as teachers supporting students to become accomplished problem-solvers through giving them structure and guidance without explicitly providing answers. Hmelo-Silver (Citation2006) adds that an important feature of scaffolding is supporting the students to decipher how to do a task as well as why it should be done in this particular way.

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