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Dive into the research topics where Margaret MacLure is active.

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Featured researches published by Margaret MacLure.


Research in education | 1979

Getting the right answer and getting the answer right

Peter French; Margaret MacLure

Asking and answering questions-on the part of teachers and pupils respectively-constitutes one of the central mechanisms of classroom interaction. This paper identifies two general interactive strategies, termed preformulating and reformulating, which, it is argued, are used by infant school teachers in the attempt to facilitate such question-answer exchanges, and hence to get the ‘right answers’ by which, from the teachers point of view, pupil-competence and teacher-effectivity are reciprocally manifested.


Archive | 1981

Learning through interaction: Language as interaction

Gordon Wells; Allayne Bridges; Peter French; Margaret MacLure; Chris Sinha; Valerie Walkerdine

‘Not to let a word get in the way of its sentence Nor to let a sentence get in the way of its intention, But to send your mind out to meet the intention as a guest; THAT is understanding.’ Chinese proverb, fourth century b.c. Most people, if asked what a language is, would almost certainly answer in terms of ‘sounds’, ‘words’ and ‘sentences’. They would probably also refer to something less clearly defined which they might call ‘meaning’. And they might just possibly add something about the purposes that language – both spoken and written – serves in the interpersonal transactions that constitute so large a part of everyday life. Such an ordering of priorities no doubt owes much to the way in which ‘language’ is encountered during the process of education: in dictionaries, in the form of comprehension exercises, and in lessons on grammar and spelling. It also corresponds quite closely to the relative emphasis that has been given to the various aspects of language in the long tradition of serious study that goes back as far as Aristotle and even earlier. The same emphasis on sounds, words and sentences, treated as units within a formal system, has also characterised the greater part of the work carried out in the present century by linguists and others who have attempted to study language ‘scientifically’.


Language | 1983

Adult-Child Conversation

Carol Myers Scotton; Peter French; Margaret MacLure


Archive | 1981

Learning through interaction: Language, literacy and education

Gordon Wells; Allayne Bridges; Peter French; Margaret MacLure; Chris Sinha; Valerie Walkerdine


Language | 1981

Teachers' questions, pupils' answers: an investigation of questions and answers in the infant classroom

Peter French; Margaret MacLure


Archive | 1981

A comparison of talk at home and at school

Gordon Wells; Allayne Bridges; Peter French; Margaret MacLure; Chris Sinha; Valerie Walkerdine; Bencie Woll


Archive | 1981

Learning through interaction: Becoming a communicator

Gordon Wells; Allayne Bridges; Peter French; Margaret MacLure; Chris Sinha; Valerie Walkerdine


Archive | 1981

Some strategies for sustaining conversation

Gordon Wells; Margaret MacLure; Martin Montgomery


Archive | 1981

Learning through interaction: Developing linguistic strategies in young school children

Gordon Wells; Allayne Bridges; Peter French; Margaret MacLure; Chris Sinha; Valerie Walkerdine


Archive | 1981

Learning through interaction: Context, meaning and strategy in parent–child conversation

Gordon Wells; Allayne Bridges; Peter French; Margaret MacLure; Chris Sinha; Valerie Walkerdine

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Gordon Wells

University of California

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