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When and how peers give reasons: justifications in the talk of middle school children

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 1999

PEGGY J. GOETZ
Affiliation:
University of Michigan
MARILYN SHATZ
Affiliation:
University of Michigan

Abstract

The ability to justify one's beliefs or actions requires linguistic, social, and cognitive skills, including an understanding of the psychological states of others and the negotiation of a socially-sensitive discourse. The production of verbal justifications was examined both quantitatively and qualitatively in eight pairs of eight- to eleven-year-old children whose natural discourse was videotaped, transcribed and coded for justifications. Previous research has frequently studied justifications in conflicts; children in this study produced most of their justifications both in the context of elaborating on a previously asserted claim and in conflicts. The statement justified and the justifications themselves most frequently focused on facts, evaluations, actions, and habitual characteristics or occurrences. A majority of the justifications were produced to support a statement which had some negative valence to it. Although causal connectives have previously been often used as the means for determining justifications, the children in this study rarely used causal connectives and mental verbs in statements with justifications. A qualitative analysis of the discourse of the dyads revealed differences in conversational styles which produced very different types of justifications. Some dyads made frequent use of narratives and co-constructed justifications; other dyads generally produced very short, often isolated justifications.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 1999 Cambridge University Press

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Footnotes

The authors thank Jeffrey Parker, who provided us with videotapes from research done for The Friendship Project for use in this study, and Deborah Keller-Cohen, who made useful suggestions for analysing the conversational style differences and commented on an earlier version of the manuscript. We also thank Melinda Martin and Daniel Gelsi for help with transcribing and coding the data. The first author received predoctoral support from NICHD TG#5T32HD071091-19.