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|  Creative Education, 2010, 2, 81-92  doi:10.4236/ce.2010.12013 Published Online September 2010 (http://www.SciRP.org/journal/ce)  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                  CE  81 Communication Practices and the Construction    of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Maria Poimenidou, Vasilia Christidou  Department of Preschool Education; University of Thessaly, Volos, Greece  Email: mpoimenidou@uth.gr  Received June 25th, 2010; revised July 28th, 2010; accepted August 10th, 2010.  ABSTRACT  The paper presents a comparative analysis of communication practices used in two kindergarten classes in Greece  during science activities related to magnets and magnetic attraction. Communication practices are classified as inter- active / dialogic, interactive / authoritative, non-interactive / dialogic, or non-interactive / authoritative. Moreover, the  role of different communication practices in the construction of meaning is analyzed, at the ideational, interpersonal  and textual level. The analysis of characteristic episodes of the two activities reveals that different communication  practices produce significant discrepancies in the meanings constructed in each classroom.  Keywords: Communication practices, Construction of meaning, Dialogicity, Preschool education, Science teaching 1. Introduction  The transition from teacher-centered to pupil-centered  models of teaching has resulted in the formulation of  preschool curricula based on children’s experiences and  active participation in exploratory learning processes.  This approach is supported by the view that an environ- ment rich in motivations can effortlessly ensure a child’s  development. However, this “natural development”  stance has been questioned. According to Vygotsky [1]  knowledge is socially acquired through communication  and the teachers’ role is crucial in this respect. Consider- ing social interaction as vital in learning, the social or- ganization of teaching activities becomes a key factor in  the achievement of the teaching objectives.  Consistent with this view, Bakthin [2] identifies two  factors determining the effectiveness of communication.  On the one hand the speaker forms an utterance taking  into account the previous experiences of the public s/he  is addressing. On the other, understanding, that is effec- tive communication, has been accomplished only when  the addressee of the message takes up an active role in  communication. Consequently “the speaker himself is  oriented precisely toward such an actively responsive  understanding. He does not expect passive understanding  that, so to speak, only duplicates his own idea in some- one else’s mind” [2:69]. Therefore, in every case partici- pation in communication means differentiation [3]. Dif- ferentiation first and foremost originates from the social  and cultural environment effecting different experiences  on individuals as well as different ways of processing  them. Especially in education, dialogue provides pupils  the opportunity to process their reserve of experiences,  while at the same time it engages children in a process of  cognitive challenge [4]. More particularly, in science  teaching this process is realized by means of the formu- lation of hypotheses, explanations, conclusions, or the  formation of taxonomies. Cognitive challenge is there- fore promoted by the establishment of learning environ- ments which aim at and support the pupils’ active in- volvement and within which learning is a cognitive and a  social process at the same time [5].  In this context the effectiveness of an instructional  procedure can be assessed in terms of analyzing commu- nicative practices. Relevant research has suggested that  classroom communication is mostly developed in the  form of triadic dialogue [6,7]. However, the effectiveness  of this communicative practice is currently questioned,  since it is based on closed questions that do not encour- age exploration, but ask for a unique correct answer [8].  Besides, triadic dialogue excludes some pupils from par- ticipating in the instructional process and clearly does not  support children’s interaction and cooperation [9].  Teaching requires from the teacher to develop appro- priate communicative practices corresponding to each  cognitive objective. Research outcomes [10] have con- firmed the positive contribution of dialogicity in the con-   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                  CE  82  text of reflective teaching, establishing the importance of  reflection and dialogicity in understanding and solving  problems as well as in reducing asymmetries between the  roles of teachers and pupils. Nevertheless, studies [11,12]  focusing on communication strategies employed in sci- ence teaching reveal that these are in majority developed  on non-dialogic models. Other studies suggest that in  science teaching a combination of dialogic and authorita- tive models of communication is essential [8,13].    Research focusing on preschool education indicates  that communication between teacher and pupils is pri- marily based on children’s play and cooperation [14].  However, especially when teaching science, teachers  seem reluctant in organizing relevant activities [15],  feeling unprepared to teach complicated scientific con- cepts, let alone encourage interactivity and dialogue. In- deed, structured science activities tend to favor directed  learning and quantity of information [16], thus reducing  the opportunities for children to actively participate in  and contribute to the development of the activities.  Likewise, the evaluation of science activities mainly fo- cuses on children’s ability to memorize and quote tech- nical terminology and expressions previously presented  [17]. Nevertheless, it is currently acknowledged that the  attribution of meaning to experiences [18] is closely re- lated with language development in children that is with  the process of ontogenesis.    The present study aims at extending the discussion on  the role of communication practices used in science ac- tivities in preschool education. Science teaching is con- sidered as a social activity based on a process of logoge- nesis, which initiates the exploration of scientific topics  while at the same time determines the roles of the par- ticipants in the process of knowledge acquisition. The  study focuses on the comparison of two science activities  to exemplify the role of different communication prac- tices in the evolution of each activity.  2. Method  2.1. Research Setting  The study concentrates on two activities about magnets  and magnetic attraction implemented with two groups of  children in different kindergartens in Nea Ionia of Mag- nesia, Greece, in May 2005. The groups consisted of  seven and five pupils of 4.6 to 6 years of age. The chil- dren had similar socio-economic backgrounds. Also, the  teachers who implemented the two activities had similar  qualifications and no significant difference in profes- sional experience.    The topic of magnets and magnetic attraction was se- lected because it is commonly negotiated in the Greek  kindergarten. Furthermore, the topic was voluntarily se- lected for negotiation by the two teachers, without any  kind of communication or cooperation between them.  Each teacher had full responsibility of the organization  and implementation of the activity in her classroom. Both  activities concentrated on magnets and their properties  and the children participated in hands-on explorations  using a variety of materials and magnets of different  shapes. The first author was present during the imple- mentation of the activities as a non-participant observer.  The activities were video-taped and subsequently tran- scribed in the form of a digital file.  2.2. The Framework of Data Analysis  For the purposes of the comparison of the two activities,  the analysis of characteristic episodes of each activity  involves two axes: a) The classes of communication  practices employed in the activities and b) The role of  communication practices in the construction of meaning.  These axes, along with their constituent dimensions will  be presented in the following paragraphs.  A) Classes of communication practices  In regards to the first axis of the analysis the model  proposed by Scott, Mortimer & Aguiar [13] was used,  according to which communication is determined by two  dimensions.   The first dimension concerns the way in which the  participants are involved in communication and is based  on the concept of dialogicity as described by Bakthin  [19]. In this respect communication can be either dialogic  or authoritative. This dimension reflects the teacher’s  attitude towards classroom communication and the way it  determines the participation –active or not- of pupils in  teaching and learning activities [20]. More particularly, a  teacher applying dialogic discourse takes into account a  range of different perspectives and attends equally to the  pupils’ (different) points of view and to the school sci- ence view. On the other hand, authoritative discourse  reflects the teacher’s intention to concentrate exclusively  to the one and only acceptable viewpoint, that of school  science [13].    The second dimension concerns the organization of the  activity, that is the participation or non-participation in  communication, which is recorded as dialogue or mono- logue and corresponds to interactive and non-interactive  communication practices respectively [13]. In science  activities addressing young children, communication is  mostly interactive. Monologic, non-interactive commu- nication is rather fragmentarily and sporadically used in  instructional activities, when it is considered as essential  by the teacher. However, one should not confuse dia- logue (that is interactive communication) with dialogic  discourse. As will become apparent below, interactive  communication (dialogue) can be authoritative (non-   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                   CE  83 dialogic) when promoting a single point of view, ex- cluding any alternative judgment expressed by an inter- locutor.   The combination of the different values of the two di- mensions described above, results in four basic classes of  communication practices (see Table 1). Therefore, dia- logue that is used to support the active, responsive un- derstanding and is based on the expression of children’s  thoughts, observations and speculations, corresponds to  an interactive / dialogic communication practice. Interac- tive / authoritative communication employs dialogue to  support a single viewpoint and in classroom settings is  mainly implemented by means of triadic dialogue [13,21],  that is a three-part pattern with utterances from the  teacher who initiates a discussion (e.g. by posing a ques- tion), the students (responding to the teacher’s utterance)  and again the teacher (who evaluates the students’ re- sponse). Furthermore, non-interactive / dialogic practice  corresponds to parts of classroom discourse that aim at  combining and recapitulating different ideas to come to a  conclusion, which often corresponds to the scientifically  accurate view. This practice is used when the teacher  introduces a functional definition, or summarizes the  outcomes of an activity, on condition that the children’s  observations and comments are taken into account. Last,  non-interactive / authoritative communication, involving  a single interlocutor (monologue) and reflecting a single  viewpoint, is typically adopted in lectures and does not  normally occur in the lower levels of education, and es- pecially preschool.  B) The contribution of communication practices in the  construction of meaning  The second axis of the analysis framework allows a  more comprehensive account of the way in which class- room communication contributes to the construction of  meaning. For this purpose the systemic theory proposed  by Halliday [22] will be adopted, according to which  each text and each human interaction form many differ- ent meanings. Therefore, the analysis of different epi- sodes of the teaching activities will illustrate the different  meanings which the communicative practices are ex- pected to support, namely the negotiation of experience,  the roles of the participants and the textual organization  of the activity corresponding to Halliday’s ideational,  interpersonal and textual meanings respectfully [22].  These dimensions enable the comparative discussion  of the role of communicative practices in the constitution  and effectiveness of teaching activities. Table 2 presents  the aforementioned three levels of meaning [22] along  with their functions and the relevant teaching purposes.  More particularly, the negotiation of experience (idea- tional meaning) relates to the elaboration and develop- ment of the topic. The ideational meaning of an activity  reflects on the use of technical vocabulary by the teacher  -subsequently adopted by the children-, as well as on the  occurrence of incidents such as formulation of functional  definitions and conclusions, or the presentation of results,  typical in science activities.  The second dimension referring to the roles of the par- ticipants (interpersonal meaning) relates to the way in  which communication practices promoted by the teacher  determine the role of the participants in communication  and their involvement in the activities.    The third dimension is related to the textual organiza- tion of the activity and reflects on information flow. In  the context of the present study the activities’ expansion  is examined at the macro-level of textual structure [23].  Therefore, the way in which communicative practices  determine the presentation of the news and the unfolding  of the activity will be explored. Communicative practices  can either reflect a procedure predetermined by the  teacher, or shaped by the actions, observations, com- ments and questions of the children. Moreover, the or- ganization of information flow will be examined in re- spect to time allocated to the evolution of the activities.  The aspect of time was considered as important because  in the context of preschool education it plays an impor- tant role both in logogenesis and ontogenesis.  Table 1. Communication practices.  Activity organization  Interactive Non-interactive  Dialogic Interactive /  Dialogic  Non-interactive /  Dialogic  Participant  involvement Authori-  tative  Interactive /  Authoritative  Non-interactive /  authoritative  Table 2. The different meanings supported by classroom  communication practices, their functions and relevant  teaching purposes.  Meaning Functions Teaching purposes  Ideational   Negotiation of  experience    Elaboration and  development of  the topic   Initiation of technical  vocabulary   Formulation of func- tional definitions   Presentation of experi- mental results   Extraction of conclusions  Interpersonal  Roles of partici- pants   Teacher and pupils’ roles  in communication     Teacher and pupils’ invo-  lvement   Textual  Textual organi-  zation   Evolution and expan-  sion of the activity   Information flow   Organization of time   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                  CE  84  C) The data analysis procedure  The transcripts of the two video-taped activities were  analyzed focusing on the interactions between teachers  and children and particularly on the types of communi- cation practices (first axis of the analysis) and on their  role in the construction of meaning (second axis of the  analysis).  The selection of teaching episodes for analysis was  made on the basis of their functionality in the instructive  process and their consistency in respect to content. This  methodological choice regards teaching performance as  basically episodic and especially in nursery activities  where regulative interventions or other kind of interrup- tions are very common. These criteria resulted in the  selection of episodes which varied in constitution and  structure, ranging from a single question of the teacher to  parts of dialogues that may not be successive, yet are  directly interrelated since they compose a distinctive and  unified conceptual sequence.  As already mentioned, the aim of this study is not to  describe the two activities in terms of the communicative  practice prevailing in each of them. By analyzing char- acteristic episodes we rather aim at identifying the func- tion of the alternative communicative options in the de- velopment of each activity and in the construction of  meaning. The episodes analyzed in the subsequent para- graphs will be referred to as Examples and their num- bering will indicate the first or the second activity as well  as their sequence. For instance, Example 1.2 refers to the  second episode of the first activity.  3. Analysis of Teaching Episodes  3.1. Communication Practices  The two activities develop by means of different com- munication models, using different communication prac- tices. These two models apparently reflect the two teach- ers’ divergent perceptions of their role as well as the role  of pupils in the classroom. Furthermore, a remarkable  feature of both activities, particularly apparent in the first  one, is that they consistently and unvaryingly follow a  single communication model throughout all stages of the  instruction.  More particularly, in the first activity communication  between the teacher and the pupils is largely composed  according to the interactive / dialogic model. Thus, in  this activity the pupils’ participation is based on their free  and spontaneous engagement in hands-on experimenta- tions, which results in a variety of actions evolving si- multaneously. This communication model establishes an  environment of freedom and independence and this is  also reflected on the children’s interactions with the  teacher. They usually do not respond to the teacher’s  questions unanimously or as a group. Furthermore, the  teacher’s questions are generally open and ask for infor- mation instead of demanding confirmation of the infor- mation provided by her. Consequently the children tend  not to give one-word or elliptical sentences, but to for- mulate complete and varying answers to the teacher’s  questions.  A typical example of the interactive-dialogic commu- nication dominant in the first activity is the following  excerpt from an episode during which the children - en- couraged by the teacher - look for objects that are at- tracted by magnets. Three children, Demetra, Helias and  Georgia take on Zisis’ suggestion and verify his observa- tion.  Example 1.1   Lines 194-204  Teacher 1: Therefore… Let’s see where it [the magnet] sticks and  where it doesn’t. Watch out!  Zisis: It sticks here, on the table. On the table…   Eleni: Yes, it sticks…  Georgia: This sticks very hard!  T1: Where else? Let’s see out here [the children start  moving around following the teacher].  Helias: Madam, I know, I know!    T1: Go on, try. Here, not outside in the yard.    Z: On the radiator?  Demetra: On the radiator, madam…  T1: Let me see…   H: Yes. [Georgia joins the group to try if her magnet will also be at- tracted by the radiator].  In the cases where contradicting views are expressed,  these are used as opportunities for open and constructive  dialogue. Moreover, cooperative actions often develop in  the course of the activity. This suggests that the dialogic  model of communication initiated by the teacher is also  adopted by the children. The duration of the first activity  was 49 minutes.  In striking contrast, during the second activity com- munication between teacher and pupils is largely imple- mented by means of the interactive-authoritative model.  The children’s actions are firmly controlled by the teach- er. A single action evolves each time, according to the  teacher’s instructions. Consequently the teacher’s ques- tions usually address the whole class and the pupils an- swer collectively, as a group. Moreover, the directed ac- tions determine the teacher’s interlocutor each time.  Most of the teacher’s questions simply ask for verifica- tion, hence the children are restricted to one-word an- swers, typically a “yes” or a “no”. The authoritative dis- course promoted by the teacher – reflecting her intention  to control the procedure totally – significantly limits the   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                   CE  85 interactions between the children. Furthermore, the con- trol wielded by the teacher in the course of the activity  and the type of interaction play a decisive role in its du- ration, which does not exceed 22 minutes.  The following episode exemplifies the type of com- munication prevailing in this classroom. The teacher not  only controls the organization of the activity but even the  position of the children, this time, Areti’s hands.  Example 2.1  Lines 141-155  Teacher 2: Yes. Let them down for a while. Just let them. Take, take  the magnet and magnetize one. Pull one of these objects for me.    Vana: Madam, can I take one, too?  T2: So bring that here. Guys, what is this [pointing to a paper clip]?   Dimitris: A hairclip.  T: Is it called hairclip?  Group: No.  T2: How is it called?    George: I told mum to buy me some [pointing to the paper clip].  T2: Well, those things that it [the magnet] pulls are called paper clips  [with an emphasis]. They are made of what?    Elli: Of iron.  Areti: Of wire.  T2: Of iron. Let it down for a while [to Areti]. It’s made of iron [she  takes Areti’s hands and puts them under the table]. You’ve already  done it. All right. Bring those paper clips [the teacher collects them].  The paper clips that we’ve pulled.  V: Me, madam?    T2: Wait.  Ε: Come, Vana, take it [the magnet].  This general image of the different communication  practices and their role in the construction of meaning  will be analyzed in the following paragraphs substanti- ated by further episodes from the two activities.  3.2. The Role of Communication Practices in the  Construction of Meaning  A) The organization of the ideational meaning  The organization of the ideational meaning is deter- mined by a) the way in which the procedures that will  enable pupils to understand magnetic attraction are real- ized through communication and b) on the way this  process is achieved through the introduction of technical  terms and specifically through definition and nominali- zation.  1) Procedures  Communication determines the way in which the chil- dren engage in the elaboration of the theme of an activity.  Both of the analyzed activities involve experimentation,  which aims at assisting children to identify the properties,  characteristics and functions of magnets. However, this  objective is implemented by means of different commu- nication practices in the two activities.    Thus, in interactive / dialogic communication system- atically promoted by the teacher in the first activity, idea- tional meaning is constructed by means of open ques- tions and speculations uttered by her, which contribute to  the dialogic elaboration of the theme. The following ex- cerpts involve such teacher utterances:  Example 1.2  Line 215   [After the children have observed that most objects attracted by the two  magnetic poles are attached to them, while the central area remains  clear, the teacher asks for justification]  Teacher 1: Why? Why? Let’s think about it. Why did most of them go  and stick here onto Christo’s and didn’t go to the middle? What do you  say?   Line 308    [The teacher encourages the children to connect science activities with  every day life]  T1: Now tell me: Where do we use those magnets? Do we really need  them?  The episodes presented above are indicative of the  teacher’s effort to motivate children and engage them in  dialogue. This communication practice provides children  with an active role in the elaboration of the activity  engaging them in incidents such as observation, descrip- tion, classification and explanation, typical in science  lessons. The open questions in the above excerpts serve  different purposes, from recollection of experiences (line  308), to explanation of an observed phenomenon (line  215).   However, this practice is not always functional or  effective. The following episode involves this teacher’s  unsuccessful effort to elicit a conclusion after relevant  experimentation.  Example 1.3  Lines 288  Teacher 1: Very well. See how he put it correctly. When we have a  magnet, Antonis says, and we put near the magnet something else that  is not a magnet, like this nail [the teacher attaches a nail to the magnet],  what does the magnet do? It [the nail] gets magnet from this magnet, so  it has magnet on it, itself. And so, what can it [the nail] do? What is it  about to do?  The dialogic / interactive character of this episode is  initially revealed by the teacher’s allusion to Antonis’  inference, but also by the fact that she uses a question to  elicit a conclusion. However, the question remains open  because the children continue their experimentation and   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                  CE  86  neither them, nor the teacher conclude to a definitive  explanation.  On the other hand, in the second activity experimenta- tion is exclusively coordinated by the teacher who takes  full control of all procedures, while in several instances  the children are limited to mere observation of her ac- tions, or the actions of a particular child, firmly pre- scribed by her. The teacher adopts an interactive / au- thoritative communication practice, which is embedded  in the use of closed questions, without giving children  the opportunity to express their views and speculations.  The following excerpt is an example of the teacher’s  pervading role in the elaboration of the theme.  Example 2.2  Lines 292-299  Teacher 2: Let’s see what will happen with iron [the teacher tries her- self]. Dimitris, look. Does it [the magnet] pick up the wood?    Dimitris: No. Give it to me [he tries to take the wooden clothes-pin  from the teacher and explore the interaction himself].     T2: Let me do it here. Does it pick up the wood?  Group: No.  T2: These, what are these made of?    Group: Wood.  T2: Toothpicks are also made of wood. Does it pick them up?    Group: No.  The authoritative communication model applied in the  second activity affects the pupils’ participation signifi- cantly. During experimentation, their answers are gener- ally brief or one-word, since the teacher does not give  them the opportunity to reflect on their actions and use  technical words to describe the observed phenomena.  Moreover, as is apparent in the following episode, apart  from the topic of the activity, the teacher totally controls  and determines the way in which the children participate  in the experimental procedure.  Example 2.3  Lines 325-349  Teacher 2: Well, Giorgos will do it. Well, let’s see Giorgos. Bring the  two reds near [referring to similar poles of two magnets], Giorgos, to  see what happens. Bring them near [the children laugh].   Areti: I want to see [Giorgos continues and the children laugh].  T2: Giorgos, now bring the two greys near. The two greys. The grey  poles. Bring them near. With one hand bring it near [Giorgos executes,  the magnets rotate and the children laugh]. Bring the two grey poles  near once more [laughter]. Let Elli do it, too.  Elli: From the two greys.  T2: Yes, from the two greys. Do it with the two grays and see what will  happen? [Elli holds a magnet in each hand and slowly brings them  near]. Leave the one still and bring the other near slowly. Leave that  still, don’t touch it. Leave it still. And move this slowly, slowly. As if  the cat comes close to eat the mouse. Slowly. Let’s see what will hap- pen. Will it eat the mouse? [On approaching, one of the magnets ro- tates, Elli is surprised, and everybody bursts out laughing].  Α: The cat got scared.    T2: What does the other magnet do when the grey one approaches?  What does it do?    Vana: It turns.  T2: It turns [Dimitris tries to take something].  E: Leave me now!  T2: Leave her, now. Elli is doing it.  D: Look! [He shows the paper clips and Vana laughs].  Α: Slowly [Talking to Elli].  T2: Bring it near slowly.  D: Madam, here!  T2: Yes [to Dimitris]. [They burst out laughing when the magnet ro- tates].  Α: Madam, can I do it, too?  T2: [To Elli] Let’s see what will happen if you bring the red near the  grey. Bring the red near the grey.  D: Madam, look! [Showing the objects he is exploring].  T2: Dimitris, you too look here to see what will happen now. Look at  what Elli is doing. She is slowly brining the red near the grey. The grey  pole. The red pole to the grey pole [the children laugh with the attrac- tion between the poles]. What happened?  E: They got stuck [laughing].  The teacher’s authoritative role is apparent in this epi- sode. She does not enhance, but quite the opposite re- stricts the children’s range of experiences. Had she pro- moted free experimentation in the context of dialogic  communication, she would have facilitated the children  to actively discover the properties of the magnetic poles.  For example, if the children had the opportunity to hold  two magnets -one in each hand, as Elli attempted to do-  they would have sensed the repulsion between similar  poles as a complement to visual observation. This ex- perience would have resulted in a more evident and con- crete perception of repulsion compared. However, the  teacher’s coordination of their actions deprives them of  this opportunity.  2) Technical language  An important issue in science lessons is the use of  technical language. The transition from everyday talk to  scientific discourse is achieved by the use of technical  terms through definition and nominalization [18]. During  the second activity a functional definition is composed  following an experimental procedure, by means of a dia- logic / non-interactive communication.  Example 2.4  Lines 135-141  Teacher 2: So these little…  Elli: Little magnets.   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                   CE  87 T2: How did we call them?  Ε: Magnets.  T2: They have a job. They can do something. Sit down [to Dimitris].  They can pull some objects [with an emphasis]. This is called ‘magnet- ism’. They pull them, they can pull them, and this is called ‘magnetism’.  But they cannot pull them all.  In this case the teacher recurs to the children’s obser- vations to introduce the concept of magnetism. Never- theless, when attempting to introduce the concept of  magnetic poles and their properties, she abandons the  dialogic stance and selects an authoritative / interactive  mode of communication by giving a definition herself,  without pursuing the children’s engagement in any kind  of experimental procedure, or taking into account their  utterances.  In contrast, the dialogic / interactive practice is  adopted in the first activity even during the introduction  of technical language.  Example 1.4  Line 255-259    Teacher 1: Well done, we put this one here, too. Very well, Eleni. Let’s  give a name now. Helias. Let’s give a name to the two edges of the  magnet. How can we call them here and there? The edges, we shouldn’t  call them ‘edges’ [with an expression of discontent]. How else should  we call them?  Dimitris: Angles.  Antonis: Superma…  T1: Superma... what?    Helias: Super magnets, because they are powerful.  The teacher invites children to participate in the activ- ity trough brainstorming, a procedure that activates im- agination and creativity. She is not concerned about un- expected thoughts and responses of the pupils. Thus,  finding a name for the poles becomes a playful procedure  and also an opportunity for reflection. The children select  a ‘phrasal’ name (“super magnets”) that signifies the  poles’ quality. This practice is more likely to promote the  pupils’ skills of formulating functional definitions, than  the authoritative stance of inviting them to adopt and  replicate ready-made terms.  B) The organization of the interpersonal meaning  The interactive / dialogic mode of communication  characterizing the first activity is evident in the teacher’s  constant reference to the children’s actions, her avoid- ance of evaluative comments and her encouragement of  the expression of their ideas. More importantly, the dia- logic interactivity promoted by the teacher in the first  activity establishes the appropriate conditions for dia- logic interactions among the children. In this context the  model of interaction between teacher and pupils supports  and at the same time is supported by spontaneous inves- tigations, cooperative action, and exchange of ideas be- tween the children, as illustrated in the following exam- ple.  Example 1.5  Lines 112-119  Zisis: Hey, guys, this much, what is it?    Teacher 1: Which one?  Z: A magnet? What is it? [Antonis explores the interaction between the  unspecified object with a small magnet].  Αntonis: It sticks.  Helias: A big headphone? Ice cream?  T1: Does it look like ice cream?    A: It attaches here easily.  In the previous episode, as well as in the episode pre- sented in Example 1.1, the children are encouraged by  the teacher to move and act freely. They are given the  opportunity to observe and the responsibility to reflect  upon the phenomena they choose to explore. In other  words, this context provides the necessary motivation for  the pupils’ active engagement in the activity, thus estab- lishing interaction and dialogicity. The example pre- sented above displays the dialogue between the children,  the spontaneous organization of common actions and the  adoption of suggestions. Therefore, dialogue and interac- tion support the co-construction of meaning by the  members of the group.  The interactive-authoritative communication model  characterizing the second activity imposes the teacher’s  total control on the interpersonal relations developed  within the group. In this context the children execute  instructions and are expected to adapt their answers in  order to correspond to the predetermined objectives set  by the teacher. This stance is particularly obvious when  children spontaneously express their thoughts. Pupils’  unexpected statements are either ignored, or commented  upon in a way which discourages their spontaneous ex- pression, as will be apparent in the following example.  Example 2.5  Lines 204-213  Teacher 2: What happened, Giorgos?  Giorgos: It doesn’t pull.  T2: It doesn’t pull. Why on earth, Giorgos, since this is a key and that is  a key, also [pointing]? Why doesn’t it pull this key while it pulls the  other one?    Elli: Because this is made of crystal.  T2: What is this made of?  E: Of crystal.  T2: What is this crystal?  E: I don’t know. I only know a word [meanwhile Giorgos explores the   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                  CE  88  interaction of the magnet with other objects].  T2: Ah, Giorgos, give me your magnet for a while. Or you rather come  here, come here. Magnetize this key [Giorgos tries and pulls the key  from its ring]. Is it magnetized?  This example reveals the non-dialogic –albeit interac- tive- character of the interaction. The teacher determines  who will participate and what their actions will be. Dur- ing this episode the children try to explain why some  objects are not attracted by the magnet. Elli –trying to  justify why some materials are not attracted by the magnet-  identifies them as “crystal”. However, the teacher ques- tions the appropriateness of Ellis’ idea. Elli perceives the  critical tone in her teacher’s question “What is this crys- tal?” and adopts an apologetic attitude confessing her  ignorance “I only know a word”.  Another significant effect of the non-dialogic commu- nication on the interpersonal meaning in the second  activity is related to the discouragement of interaction  between the children and their actions, or ideas. The  teacher, by addressing one child at a time, mainly directing  him/her towards specific operations, eliminates every  possibility of cooperation and estimation of different  viewpoints expressed by the children.  C) The organization of the textual meaning  The third stage for analyzing the meaning of the activity  concerns the managing of information flow. Therefore  the interactional context defines the way children’s ac- tions and thoughts contribute to the presentation of the  activities’ news. The analysis of textual structure will  focus on information flow comprising two aspects,  namely the activities’ textual expansion and temporal  organization.  1) The expansion of the activity  The evolution of the first activity is mainly organized  by means of the teacher’s comments on the pupils’ ac- tions. Those comments encourage the participation of all  children in similar actions and subsequently support their  attempts to explain what they have observed during their  experimentations. This practice creates cohesion between  the children’s experimentations and the unfolding of the  activity.  Example 1.6  Lines 209-213  Teacher 1: Ah! Look what Helias has done. Ah! Very very good!    Antonis: Look!  T1: Eh, Helias, why haven’t they been attached here, in the middle? But  look at the sides of this magnet. Everyone, look at Helias for a moment.  Look for a moment. Where have most of them gone and stuck? Here, at  the middle, or on the sides, on the edges?    Group: On the sides.  T1: Most of them are stuck on the edges, huh? There! And the one that  Georgia has, raise it up, Georgia, for us to see. See where they mostly  got stuck? Here, in the middle, or here on the edge [pointing]?  G: On the edge.  T1: Why? Why? Come on, think about it. Why most of them went and  got stuck here on Christos’ [magnet] and didn’t go to the middle? What  do you say now?  In the episode presented in Example 1.6 the teacher in- itiates another stage of the activity by directing the chil- dren to the observation of the magnetic poles by identi- fying Helias’ action. Two children immediately corre- spond to her incitement. Therefore, the dialogic / interac- tive practice here contributes to the expansion of the ac- tivity, by stimulating the children’s interest and ensuring  their involvement in a common action. This action is  aimed at advancing the activity, allowing for the pro- spective explanation of the observed phenomenon. Con- versely, every action and every stage in the course of the  second activity is determined by the teacher’s statements  and is not related to what has preceded.  Example 2.6    Lines 74-77  Teacher 2: Elli, put the rubber band down here. You too, leave the  clothes-pin, Dimitris. And now… Giorgos take the magnet. Take it in  your hands. And now Elli will approach the magnet to these objects that  we have up here. Let’s see, what happens? Will there be any magic?  [Elli experiments until an object is attracted and the children start  laughing]. What happens?  Group: It sticks.  The episode presented above reflects the communica- tion’s non-dialogic character. The teacher has full re- sponsibility of the organization and flow of the activity.  The pupils’ actions are supposed to execute her instruc- tions in a definite time without self-acting, or expressing  personal views and queries. This only leaves a single  possibility for the evolution of the activity, namely the  one prescribed by the teacher.    On the other hand, the most extensive non-interactive  parts of the teacher’s discourse in the first activity in- volve in majority instructions for the coordination of the  children’s actions. Similarly, the teacher’s utterances  loudly describing the pupils’ actions, or announcing a  personal teacher-pupil dialogue aiming at facilitating the  evolution of the activity, can also be classified in the  same context. Therefore, even when this teacher intro- duces non-interactive communication, this remains dia- logic, since its frame of reference is children’s actions  and viewpoints.  Example 1.7  Lines 181  Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                   CE  89 Teacher 1: Everybody, look. It got stuck. Vagelitsa stuck it there. Eh…  It remained up there. This, Dimitra said before, some have iron. But it  does not stick onto Dimitra’s bracelet. Look. On the bracelet, says  Dimitra, it doesn’t stick onto her bracelet. Where else can it stick? Go  on, try somewhere.  Example 1.7 documents the teacher’s attempt to con- vey individual children’s experiences and thoughts to the  whole group. This contributes to the extension of the  activity, putting forward new problems. The teacher’s  statements establish a dialogic process aiming at inform- ing the group, and at broadening the field of individual  observations.  2) The temporal organization of the activity  A particular component of the first activity, signifi- cantly enhancing its interactive-dialogic character, con- cerns the managing of time. The interaction between  teacher and pupils is not restricted temporally. This at- tribute supports the dialogic nature of the activity in two  ways. First, the teacher does not rush to close the discus- sion, but instead avoids providing answers to the pupils’  questions directly, inviting the children to further explore  them.  Example 1.8  Lines 445-449  Teacher 1: But do you know why? Why these two hands do not hug  each other?  There! There! There! Look at Zisis’ little hand. He is  trying. Why don’t they hug and push each other like this? Huh? Do you  know why? Why… Why… Yours goes like this, too [to Vaggelitsa]?  Mine also turns around. Look. Do you know, Vaggelitsa?    Vaggelitsa: I know! Because from the other side it doesn’t have any  magnetism, while from this it does.    T1: Look here, for a moment. Vaggelitsa says that these little mag- nets… look here for a moment. Vaggelitsa says that these little magnets  push one another; they don’t want to hug because, she says, one of  them does not have magnetism. Anything else you might think about  this? Dimitra?  The second way in which the loose organization of  time supports dialogic communication in the first activity  involves the repetition of stages. Therefore, the activity  does not evolve serially, but the group is allowed to refer  to previous unresolved issues requiring further explora- tion or a more elaborated explanation.    The loose organization of time in the first activity is  also evident in the teacher’s reactions at instances where  the pupils refer back to an unresolved issue. In the fol- lowing episode Dimitra participates in the exploration of  a question and initially confronts Zisis’ view. The time  provided by the teacher for investigation gives Dimitra  the opportunity to develop her explanation about the  phenomenon under consideration and to demonstrate her  point of view through the experimental procedure. Dimi- tra returns to the issue that troubles her and this offers the  teacher the opportunity to repeat the experiment inviting  all the children to observe and participate in the discus- sion. Episodes like the one presented below support the  position that meanings flow, as dialogue expands. In  addition they reveal that children’s ideas, explorations  and pace contribute to the construction of meaning.  Example 1.9  Lines 215-224   Teacher 1: Why? Why? Let’s think about it. Why did most of them go  and stick here onto Christo’s and didn’t go to the middle? What do you  say?   Zisis: Because it had no magnet.  T1: Why?  Ζ: It had no magnet.  T1: It had no magnet here, at the middle?  Dimitra: There’s magnet all over it.  T1: There’s magnet all over it, she says.  Helias: But it sticks [moving an object towards the magnet].  T1: Yes, but why did most of them go to the edges?    D: There’s magnet all over it. Because if we put it like this… can you  put it?  […]  [Meanwhile Dimitra confirms through her experimentations that there  is magnetic attraction all over the magnet. Trying to explain why ob- jects are mainly attached to the poles she proposes her teacher to leave  the magnet on the table instead of holding it vertically].  Lines 243-247  Dimitra: You know something, madam? There’s magnet all over it. If  we lie it down!    Teacher 1: You say if we lie it down it won’t go?  Look, Dimitra.  Everyone, look at something! Let’s see what Dimitra says. Everyone,  come over here! Oops! Oh, they went away. Never mind. Leave them  there. Never mind, never mind, never mind. Let’s see what Dimitra  says. Let’s see what Dimitra says [She moves the magnet on the table].  As it moves on, its edges pull them, see?  D: Yes, its edges.  T1: So, could it be that its edges have more power?  D: No.  […]  Lines 271-272  Dimitra: You know something, madam? As it’s lying down, if we put a  small nail here, it catches it.  Teacher 1: It catches it. But it only catches a small nail, while here it  catches a lot.  The dialogic aspect of the interaction is more explic- itly revealed at the final part of the episode (lines  271-272), where the teacher takes advantage of Dimitra’s   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                  CE  90  observation to refine the account of the observed phe- nomenon. The improvement of Dimitra’s reasoning con- sists in shifting the focus from mere observation of the  phenomenon to the exploration of properties which de- termine it, providing the discussion with the conditions  necessary to shift from description to explanation (at the  level of discourse) and from perception to comprehen- sion (at the level of conceptual representation).  This mode of time management – both at the mac- rolevel of the activity and the microlevel of distinct epi- sodes - gives pupils the possibility to organize their rea- soning and their discourse. At the same time it gives the  teacher the opportunity to follow the children’s line of  thinking, reflect on their actions, advance the discussion,  and take the activity forward.  In the case of the second activity the teacher has the  total responsibility of time management without taking  into account pupil’s views and speculations (see, for in- stance, Example 2.1). This total control significantly af- fects the evolution and duration of the instruction.    It should be noted that under no circumstances the  discussion readdressed the same issue at different points  during the second activity. Furthermore, many actions  are implemented by the teacher herself, which grants her  with a particularly tight organization of time and contrib- utes to the prompt textual unfolding of the activity.  4. Discussion  The preceding analysis indicates that the divergent  communication practices adopted in the course of the  two activities establish different conditions in the respec- tive classes. Dialogicity turns out to be an effective  communicational practice that determines the construc- tion of meaning by means of the children’s actions. On  the other hand, authoritative discourse facilitates the  presentation of the scientific aspect.    Each of the dialogic and authoritative communication  practices establishes a particular climate in the classroom,  which is determined by the way children participate and  the actions by means of which the activity is imple- mented.   The first activity is apparently organized according to  a child-centered pedagogical philosophy, while at the  same time it adopts a socio-cultural view of learning  based on communication [1,2]. These two principles  grant the teacher the sensitivity to respect the children’s  views and the flexibility to avoid a predetermined course.  The teacher provides the children with the time necessary  for their spontaneous experimentation and takes advan- tage of their observations. By encouraging dialogue she  enables the children to process their experiences and en- gage in cognitive challenge [4], putting emphasis on the  cognitive and the social aspects of learning [5] at the  same time. Furthermore, by surpassing the linear tempo- ral evolution of the stages of the activity, she revisits  previous stages. This non-linear organization of the ac- tivity is either used to extend a problem (Examples 1.12  & 1.13), or to explore ideas and speculations put forward  by the children (Example 1.9 lines 243-247 & 271-272).  Therefore, the interactive / dialogic model promoted  by the first activity realizes the teacher’s intention to  facilitate the children’s actions and the development of  ideas. The teacher grants the children with an active role,  to which they correspond; they actively engage in ex- perimentations, contributing to the evolution of the activity.  They participate in the activity -at times individually, at  others through collaboration in small groups (Example  1.5). They focus not only on their points of concern and  interest, but also contribute with their ideas to their  peers’ effort (Example 1.9). They announce their obser- vations and share the pleasure of discovery with their  group (Example 1.1). They engage in cognitive conflict  (Examples 1.8 & 1.9). This communication model real- izes the fundamental principle of communication, relat- ing understanding with active participation [2,24,25].  Dialogicity, a dominant attribute of this activity, supports  reflective teaching [10], overcoming significant weak- nesses in the thematic organization of the activity. At the  same time, as the analysis in the previous section indi- cates, the social interactions enacted by dialogicity con- stitute a valuable strategy for kindergarten supporting  children’s understanding and cognitive progress and ena- bling ‘the possible to be transformed to feasible’ [25.  1006].  However, while dialogicity supports the active par- ticipation of pupils, its consistent and undifferentiated  use by the teacher in the first activity reveals significant  limitations. The evolution of the activity illustrates that  this teacher has probably no particular plan, or lacks a  theoretical background related to the specificities of sci- ence teaching. Therefore, her supportive and facilitative  role sometimes remains unfulfilled. In such cases the  adherence to the dialogic / interactive communication  proves ineffective and underlines the need for systematic  planning in science activities and for the use of alterna- tive communicative practices at different stages and for  different purposes [13]. Therefore, as every methodo- logical choice, a child-centered stance, realized through  dialogic / interactive communication should take into  consideration specific teaching objectives and the evolu- tion of the activity.  In contrast, the teacher in the second activity consis- tently undertakes the role of the expert. She focuses on  the quantity of information that can be delivered – main- ly by her- in the course of the activity [16], directs chil- dren’s learning and restricts them to the repetition of   Communication Practices and the Construction of Meaning: Science Activities in the Kindergarten  Copyright © 2010 SciRes.                                                                                   CE  91 technical terminology and expressions [17]. This is par- ticularly evident when she introduces a definition (Ex- ample 2.4 line 141). Such episodes constitute functional  and essential parts of science activities. However, the  authoritative / interactive communication practice perva- sively used during the second activity deprives the chil- dren from the possibility to participate in the production  of classroom discourse that would have brought out in- dications of their understanding and of the effectiveness  of communication [2].    Moreover, the authoritative interaction promoted dur- ing the second activity places the teacher in a strikingly  privileged position in relation to the pupils, and allows  her to determine the organization and evolution of the  activity, as well as the children’s role in the whole proc- ess. This model of one-way communication, which  builds on triadic dialogue [6,7], restrains the develop- ment of scientific reasoning based on the exploration of  assumptions. Therefore, in the course of the second ac- tivity the children are not given the opportunity to ex- press their thoughts and in the few instances where this  occurs spontaneously (Example 2.5 line 207) the teacher  fails to correspond and exploit the children’s ideas relat- ing them to the experimental procedure. Even when she  introduces teaching strategies (such as the cat and mouse  analogy in Example 2.3 line 330), these do not serve her  teaching purposes [24] but are merely used to attract the  children’s interest and attention, and therefore do not  contribute to understanding. Thus, this teacher only seeks  passive understanding and discards the opportunity for  effective communication [2]. Had this teacher included  dialogicity at certain points of her instruction, her pupils  would have had the opportunity to elaborate the out- comes of their experiments, draw conclusions from their  actions and come up with functional definitions. Such  skills of scientific thinking are not encouraged by the  communication practice she adopts.  5. Conclusions  The present study employed a framework of analysis for  comparing communication practices and their role in the  construction of meaning in two kindergarten activities  about magnets and magnetic attraction. The analysis  presented in the previous sections illustrates critical dis- crepancies in the discourses produced in the two classes.  These different discourses directly result from the com- municative practices adopted by the two teachers. More- over, these discourses produce clearly differentiated  meanings at the ideational, interpersonal, and textual  level.  More particularly, the differences in ideational mean- ing result from the differences in the negotiation of prac- tical experiences, the introduction and use of technical  language, as well as the formulation of functional defini- tions, explanations, or conclusions.  The differences in interpersonal meaning between the  two activities are exemplified by the different roles  adopted by the two teachers (facilitator or expert) and  granted to their pupils (equivalent, active participants in  the learning process, or passive executors of instructions).  Last, the differences in textual meaning reflect dis- crepancies in terms of the activities’ expansion, that is  the degree to which this textual organization is influ- enced by the children’s actions, or is entirely predeter- mined by the teacher. Differences in textual meaning also  reflect discrepancies in terms of time managing. There-  fore different levels of dialogicity impose variations in  regards to the rhythm and duration on each activity, as  well as in regards to its degree of temporal linearity.  The preceding analysis underlines the necessity for  preschool teachers to systematically design their science  activities taking into account the social dimension of  learning [1] and select accordingly the communicative  practices most appropriate for each topic, stage, and  teaching objective. 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