This research looks at teacher-student exchanges in three content-based language classrooms The data reveal persistent archetypal patterns of classroom interaction, teachers speak most of the time and they initiate the majority of the exchanges by asking display questions, whereas student-initiated requests are referential In addition, teachers modify their own speech in response to students' signals of non-understanding regardless of activity type (whole class, small group, one-to-one), but students prefer to verbally request help only in small group or one-to-one interactions with the teacher Moreover, although teachers repeatedly modify their speech in response to students' requests (verbal or non-verbal), they rarely request modifications oj the students' speech Sustained negotiation-in which teachers and students verbally resolve incomplete or inaccurate messages-occurs rarely or not at all in these classrooms The research differs from earlier work on L2 teacher talk and negotiation in that it attempts to shed light on why these patterns of interaction persist The discussion of the data includes the participating teachers' explanations of their own behaviors Students' reactions to negotiation in content-based instruction are gleaned from end-of-semester evaluations of both the teacher and the course Overall lack of linguistic negotiation is attributed to teachers' and learners' expectations for appropriate classroom behaviors, teachers' sensittvity to affective variables in second language learning, power relationships, and time management considerations While the present research supports previous experimental studies in which learners' clarification requests result in teacher-modified input, they also challenge the feasibility of promoting more negotiation in content-based instruction BACKGROUND Research in content-based instruction has firmly established that even earlystage second language (L2) learners can acquire significant amounts of subject matter knowledge through instruction conducted solely in the L2 (Lapkin and Swain 1984, Bnnton, Snow, and Wesche 1990, Musumeci 1993) In addition particularly in the areas of listening and reading, classroom learners L2 competence can become native-like in content-based instructional settings The success of this type of instructional approach has been attributed to the fact that learners are exposed to copious amounts of comprehensible input, in contrast
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