Turn Taking Strategies by Eqwip Hubs Community (original) (raw)

Profiling turns in interaction: Discourse structure and function

… 2001. Proceedings of the 34th Annual …, 2001

Turn-taking provides a basis for comparing interactions in different communication environments, and this paper demonstrates that readily observable features of turns can be linked to principles that organize and manage the interaction. Results are based on 150 decision-making interactions elicited in a face-to-face environment, an asynchronous, e-mail environment, and several types of synchronous computer-mediated environments. We show that three features of turns can be linked to discourse structure and function. First, as turns increase in size, participants switch from serial to parallel strategies to organize their decision-making. Second, pivot turns, which are turns that are much shorter than the turns that precede or follow them, can reflect the discourse functions of the relevant turns. Finally, turns can be used for measures of dominance based on turn size. We conclude that designers of communication systems can take advantage of peoples' ability to develop effective strategies for packaging messages in different environments. 0-7695-

Turn-Taking Analysis on Students’ Debate: Conversation Analysis

2023

In the conversation, normally the participants do not pay attention or are aware of the turn-taking that each one should consider. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate turn-taking patterns which are IRF (Initiation-Response-Feedback) in students' NUDC. The participants of this study were the NUDC teams from classes 2020A and 2021C of the English Study Program of UNIKA St. Paulus, Ruteng. The data were collected using the qualitative method to describe the IRF pattern in students' debates. The procedure for collecting the data was recording the debate, transcribing the spoken text, and analyzing and identifying the IRF pattern used by each debater. The result of the study was the dominant pattern used is IRF with 12 times (44.4%), the second is I with 8 times (29.6%, the third is RF with 6 times (22.2%), while the lowest is IR with only used one time (3.7%). The recommendation for the next researchers is to study the correlation between understanding the debate motion and turn-taking in debate.

A Study of Turn Taking Used in Radio Talk Show Under the Topic “Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment”

2017

This research analyzed about the using of turn-taking as the strategy in the radio talk show at Hard Rock FM in the topic Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment, the guest was Myra Brown. It was analyzed because the researcher considered that turn-taking was one of strategies of language. The research approach was descriptive qualitative. It identified the types of turn-taking, the speakers’ strategies, some reasons that the speakers took the turn, and the relation among the speakers after they took the turn. The main theories that the researcher used were discourse analysis by Gee (2011), turn-taking by Renkema (2004), and context by van Dijk (2009). This research discovered that there were three types of turn taking. They are speaker’s selection, speaker’s self choice, and speaker’s determination. Strategies that are used by the speakers, they are overlap, interruption, back-channel, and silence. One of the reasons that the speakers took the turn was that the hosts dig informati...

Exploring Turn-Taking Dynamics in debates: A Comprehensive Analysis

Political debate, 2024

The study focuses on turn taking in the political debate involving Shashi Tharoor, Rajdeep Sardesai and Harsh Gupta, using the UAM corpus tool, focusing on 48-minute debate video. Utilizing mixed-method approach the study delves into both qualitative and quantitative analyses to investigate questions, answers, clarifications, acknowledgements, topic initiation, agreement, takes a turn, turn allocation and clarification requests and other turn taking features. The research model of sacks, Schegloff and Jefferson (1974) embodies conversation analysis (CA) while Teun A.Van digik's model embodies critical discourse analysis (CDA), to analyse communication behaviours with in political discourse. Results show that questions are the predominant feature consisting of (8.5%) of total turn taking features followed by answers (7.80%), clarifications (4.96%), takes a turn (4.61%), agreement (2.84%), acknowledgement (2.13%), clarification request (1.77%), turn allocation (1.77%) and instruction (1.77%). Participants utilize multifaceted communication tactics to initiate discourse, respond, clarify, agreements, clarifying requests and acknowledge contributions. In spite of limitations including sample size and potential biases, the study suggests significant outcomes for digital literacy, schooling, communication sciences, political science and civic engagement. By elucidating the shades of communication in political discourse the research enhances to informed public discussion, citizen indulgence and democratic governance. Further research marks these limitations and explores new corridors for understanding turn taking occurrences in distinct political contexts.

Turn Taking in Discourse.docx

When people interact each other, they cannot avoid for taking a turn. Language features for taking turn in spoken discourse will differ cross cultures, and this paper analyze features for taking turn used by Journalist and teachers' coversations. It's aim is to find out the features, and whether it is suitable or not.

The Application of Turn-Taking Strategies on THE BOYZ Podcast Highlight Episode: Conversation Analysis Reflection

IDEAS: Journal on English Language Teaching and Learning, Linguistics and Literature

A conversation is not all about a social activity that involves two people or more who chatter on anything. It has been regulated in the basic principles of spoken language in linguistics. The approach to analyzing the rules of interactive spoken language is mainly attached to the scope of conversation analysis which is commonly known as turn-taking. This research presents the appliance of turn-taking strategies and the patterns of turn-in-talk on THE BOYZ podcast conducted by bilingual speakers, which refers to the theory from Sacks et al. (1974). Furthermore, this study aims to identify the implication of language alternation usage by bilingual speakers in the conversation using the bilingual communication theory proposed by Mahecha and Auer (1986). The data are collectively derived from the utterances of the interview session transcribed on the DIVE Studios Podcasts' YouTube channel. The results revealed the parties on the podcast are more likely to use adjacency pairs among ...

Turn Taking Strategies used by Adult in Natural Conversation

This research is analyzing the turn taking strategies by adult. Conversation Analysis will be used to conduct this research. We will look how the adult manage they turn taking when they get conversation each other. This phenomenon is quite interesting to be analyzed since the adults have the ability to have standard conversation. That is why will analyze how they take part in conversation and what happened in the process of it.