Ce. Ford, Collaborative construction of task activity: Coordinating multiple resources in a high school physics lab, RES LANG S, 32(4), 1999, pp. 369-408
This article documents the collaborative coordination of multiple resources
-talk, gesture, and writing-as represented in the interaction among 3 high
school seniors working on a physics laboratory task. Through the close anal
ysis of the moment-to-moment construction of task, this study draws attenti
on to complex yet taken-for-granted practices that are integral to thinking
and acting in the ubiquitous context of laboratory activities. In line wit
h other research on situated action, it is critical to our understanding of
jointly implemented activities that we look closely at their forms on part
icular occasions. These students display forms of competence that can be ma
nifested only in interaction. From this perspective, learning activities in
volve not only making conceptual connections but also, and crucially, makin
g interactional connections, knowing how to collaboratively construct a tas
k.