Affiliation:
1. Institute for psychology, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Belgrade, Serbia
Abstract
This study explores differences between more and less competent peers in
joint problem-solving dialogues, related to opposite interaction outcomes of
more competent students (progression/regression). Ten asymmetrical peer
dyads were selected from 47 dyads participating in the previous study: five
in which more competent (MC) student progressed the most, and five in which
MC students regressed the most after a post-test. Ten dialogue
characteristics were established in 50 conversations of these dyads. Cluster
analysis revealed two dialogue types associated with different interaction
outcomes of MC students. In the first one, MC students justified correct
answers but behaved inconsistently with their higher competences. The second
cluster characterizes domination-submissiveness pattern and MC students?
unwillingness to justify opinion. All regressing MC students participated in
the first dialogue type and 56% of progressing MC students in the second.
Qualitative analysis of the conversations typical for extracted clusters
implies that although ready to provide arguments to their peers when they
can, regressing MC students exhibit uncertainty, thereby losing from
interaction. Progressing MC students seem to protect themselves against
possible interaction disturbances by dominant attitude and withdrawal from
communication.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia
Cited by
2 articles.
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