Teaching resources
PowerPoint presentations for teaching
1. A workshop on TA
These slides cover all of the topics that you may wish to cover in running a TA workshop and are taken from the authors' own workshop teaching.
Teaching exercises
These are suggested activities and exercises for workshops, classes or assignments. They are grouped into four presentations depending on their source.
1. Teaching exercises - 'childfree' dataset UG teaching
These are ideal for use in undergraduate teaching and build sequentially. They are primarily developed from activities in the book and include:
- A reflexivity task
- A familiarisation activity
- An advanced familiarisation activity
- A coding activity
- A theme development exercise
- A theme definition writing activity
- An analytic writing activity
- A located interpretation activity
2. Teaching exercises - 'men and healthy eating' dataset PG
These are ideal for use in postgraduate teaching and build sequentially. They are primarily developed from activities in the book and include:
- A familiarisation activity
- A coding activity
- A theme development exercise
- A theme definition writing activity
- An analytic writing activity
- A located interpretation activity
3. Exercises from the book
These exercises and activities are not connected to a specific dataset but are still drawn from the book:
- Getting started with familiarisation
- An evaluating analytic claims activity
- Theoretical assumptions activity
- Theoretical detection activity
- Critically evaluating the account of TA in published research activity
- Critically evaluating a published ‘reflexive TA’ study
4. Exercises from workshops
These exercises and activities are based on Ginny and Victoria’s own teaching. Handouts to accompany these exercises have also been provided on the website (see Chapter 4, Chapter 5, Chapter 6, Chapter 8 and Chapter 9).
- Semantic or latent code?
- Code or theme?
- Topic summaries or themes?
- Illustrative or analytic treatment of data extracts?
- Critically evaluating descriptions of the reflexive TA process in journal articles
- Reflecting on how the data and analysis have been contextualised and interpreted in published TA reports
- Which theory of language – reflective, intentional or constructionist?
- Evaluating published TA studies
Teaching handouts
The classroom handouts are self-supporting so that students shouldn’t need access to the book or website to complete them.