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Written Communication
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The Writing Conference as a Locus of Emergent Agency

Susan Strauss

The Pennsylvania State University

Xuehua Xiang

University of Illinois, Chicago

This article examines writing conference discourse in one English as a Second Language (ESL) basic composition course. The study is based on a 25,000-word corpus of 10 writing conference interactions between the instructor and seven students. Through a microlevel analysis, the authors demonstrate how and to what degree the writing conference can serve as a locus of "emergent agency," with a particular focus on the second-language writer. The data exhibit patterns in the students’ discourse such that earlier segments in the interactions tend to reflect uncertainty, confusion, negative self-evaluation, and negative other-evaluation. As the sessions progress, the authors note shifts in stance whereby students begin to propose candidate solutions to actual or perceived problems and evince more authorial direction. The authors demonstrate that the practice can serve as an effective pedagogical activity in which novice writers learn to navigate through challenges and obstacles associated with university-level reading and writing tasks.

Key Words: dialogism • agency • mediated cognition • planning • formulating • collaborative problem solving • stance marking

Written Communication, Vol. 23, No. 4, 355-396 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/0741088306292286


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