Intertextuality for Handling Complex
Environmental Issues
Nowhere is the need for handling complexity more pertinent than in addressing
environmental issues. Our study explores students’ situated constructs of complexity in
unfolding discourses on socio-scientific issues. Students’ dialogues in two group-work episodes are analysed in detail, with tools from Systemic Functional Linguistics. We identify the
significance of intertextuality in students’ realizations of low- and high-complexity discourses.
In the high-complexity event, we show how students take on different roles and use modality
and projection as grammatical resources for opening up, for different positions, multiple
voices, and various contextual resources. Successful handling of complexity is construed by
the interplay between students’ roles in the discourse and resources in language for making
multiple voices present. In the high-complexity event, the handling of complexity is guided by
the students’ sense of purpose. Handling complexity is demanding, and explicit scaffolding is
necessary to prevent a potentially complex challenge from being treated as a simple one
j310 | | Perpustakaan FITK Pusat | Tersedia |
Penerbit
Springer Science Business Media :
New York.,
2016
Klasifikasi
Research In Science Education
Pernyataan Tanggungjawab
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