From L2 Interactional Competence to L2 Interactional Repertoires: Reconceptualising the Objects of L2 Learning

In this paper, I offer a reconsideration of "interactional competence" as an object of L2 learning. I argue that the field's uptake of the concept displays a misunderstanding of, or at least a lack of attention to, its related but distinct intellectual roots in linguistic anthropology...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Classroom discourse Vol. 9; no. 1; pp. 25 - 39
Main Author: Hall, Joan Kelly
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Routledge 02-01-2018
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Summary:In this paper, I offer a reconsideration of "interactional competence" as an object of L2 learning. I argue that the field's uptake of the concept displays a misunderstanding of, or at least a lack of attention to, its related but distinct intellectual roots in linguistic anthropology and conversation analysis. This has resulted in conceptual confusion in studies that draw mainly on conversation analysis to examine L2 learning. I offer "interactional repertoires" as a more empirically useful concept to capture the objects of L2 learning. Its usefulness is twofold. First, it more aptly captures the variable nature of the multilingual, multimodal resources that learners draw on and develop in their diverse contexts of use. Second, it suggests a more empirically valid understanding of learning, not as a linear, single, one-path-fits-all process, but rather as multidimensional trajectories occurring over L2 learners' lifespans.
ISSN:1946-3014
DOI:10.1080/19463014.2018.1433050