Using genre to explain how children linguistically co-construct make-believe social scenarios in classroom role-play

Author:

Mukherjee Sarah Jane1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Wellbeing, Education and Language Studies , The Open University , Milton Keynes , Bucks , UK

Abstract

Abstract This paper argues that classroom role-play can be conceptualised theoretically as an oral genre, as defined within Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL). The work draws on analysis of 15 video-recorded child-led role-plays in which groups of three 4–5 year-old children engage in five different life-like social scenarios. The study is underpinned by SFL register and genre analysis of the children’s interactions, and the findings reveal how the children’s linguistic choices have a direct impact on the dynamically unfolding role-play, and how imaginary scenarios are construed by the instantiation of individual genre stages, some of which serve to regulate the role-play and others that mimic real life social scenarios. The findings suggest that the two different types of stages construe two separate, but interwoven contexts, with the make-believe context often being dependent on the regulative context. The paper offers new insights into the ways in which SFL can reveal nuances in children’s dialogic and dynamic language in play.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Communication,Language and Linguistics,Linguistics and Language,Philosophy,Communication,Language and Linguistics

Reference56 articles.

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3. Bateson, Gregory. 1971 [1956]. The message “This is play”. In R. E. Herron & Brian Sutton-Smith (eds.), Child’s play. New York: John Wiley.

4. Bluiett, Tarsha. 2018. Ready or not, play or not: Next steps for sociodramatic play and the early literacy curriculum: A theoretical perspective. Reading Improvement 55(3). 83–88.

5. Blum-Kulka, Shoshana, Deborah Huck-Taglich & Hanna Avni. 2004. The social and discursive spectrum of peer talk. Discourse Studies 6(3). 307–328. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461445604044291.

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