Article published In: Dialogue in institutional settings
Edited by Franca Orletti and Letizia Caronia
[Language and Dialogue 9:1] 2019
► pp. 125–148
Assessing a (gifted) child in parent-teacher conference
Participants’ resources to pursue (and resist) a no-problem trajectory
Published online: 5 July 2019
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00035.car
https://doi.org/10.1075/ld.00035.car
Abstract
Delivering and acknowledging assessments are the most recurrent institutional activities occurring in
parent-teacher conference. This paper reports data from a mother-teacher conference concerning a gifted child. We show how
participants’ practices to accomplish and receive assessment in the report-assessment phase of the event: (a) display their
relative epistemic and deontic rights, (b) are oriented to participants’ institutional relevant identities, and (c) project or
even enact different and quite opposite assessment trajectories. We contend that struggles in assessing the child display
participants’ different stances: teachers’ ‘normalizing’ and ‘group oriented’ trajectory vs. the mother’s orientation toward
‘doctorability’ and pressure for individualized treatment. Although typically occurring between routine-case oriented institutions
vs. idiosyncratic-case oriented clients, such a struggle displays also the ‘paradoxical injunctions’ that frame teachers’ everyday
work: adopting a ‘group-oriented’ perspective while at the same time being accountable for an individualized approach.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.The structural organization and knowledge distribution in parent-teacher conference
- 3.Data collection and analysis
- 4.Constructing the assessable child
- 4.1Displaying epistemic cautiousness: Evidentials and other mitigating devices in teachers’ assessment
- 4.2Reducing the relevance of negative results
- 4.3Negative assessments in service of positive evaluation: Co-implicating the parent in the making of diagnostic news
- 4.4Downgrading the idiosyncratic nature of problematic behaviors: Generalizing as a normalization practice
- 5.The mother’s receptions of the teacher’s assessments
- 6.Concluding remarks
- Notes
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Ranzani, Federica
2023. The pediatrician’s normalizing practice in well-child visits. In A Pragmatic Agenda for Healthcare [Pragmatics & Beyond New Series, 338], ► pp. 227 ff.
Caronia, Letizia & Vittoria Colla
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