Patterns of Interaction in English Language Teaching (ELT) Classroom: An Ethnographic Study
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Kathmandu University School of Education
Abstract
This ethnographic study investigates the dynamics of classroom discourse within the
Nepalese English Language Teaching (ELT) context, focusing on the relationship
between interactional patterns and student engagement. Despite the pedagogical shift
toward student-centeredness, teacher-dominated discourse often persists in language
classrooms. The purpose of this research is to analyze how specific instructional
strategies shape the predominant patterns of classroom interaction within the current
Nepalese ELT landscape.
The study employed an ethnographic research design, guided by the
interpretive paradigm and the theoretical frameworks of Social Constructivism and
Collaborative Learning. Data were collected through 36 days of participant
observation in the classrooms of two English teachers and further supported by
ethnographic interviews and document analysis in order to provide a thick description
of classroom culture.
The findings reveal that the traditional Initiation-Response-Feedback (IRF)
cycle remains a dominant pattern of interaction in ELT. However, the study highlights
diverse strategies employed by the teachers in the classroom to foster student
engagement and identifies various patterns of interaction. A significant contribution
of this study is the identification of a layered interactional process that extends
beyond verbal exchange. This includes engagement with digital technology and
classroom semiotics. The study identifies student’s internal dialogue, self-monitoring,
rehearsal, and reflection as learner-self interaction and learners’ engagement with
technology as technological interaction.
The study concludes that when teachers transition from information providers
to facilitators, students demonstrate higher cognitive development and communicative
competence. These findings offer practical implications for teacher educators and
curriculum designers in Nepal, advocating for interaction-focused frameworks that
prioritize student talking time and reflective practices as core instructional strategies.
