مقایسهٔ روشها
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| تحلیل مکالمه مشارکتی× | تحلیل مکالمه× | |
|---|---|---|
| حوزه | کیفی | کیفی |
| خانواده | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| سال پیدایش≠ | 2000s–2010s (building on CA foundations from the 1960s–1970s) | Late 1960s–1974 (foundational lectures 1964–1972; landmark article 1974) |
| پدیدآور≠ | Developed from Harvey Sacks, Emanuel Schegloff, and Gail Jefferson's Conversation Analysis tradition; participatory variant emerged in applied and practitioner research contexts in the 2000s–2010s | Harvey Sacks, Emanuel Schegloff, and Gail Jefferson |
| نوع | Qualitative research method | Qualitative research method |
| منبع بنیادین≠ | Lee, E., & Howes, C. (2020). Conversation analysis as a creative research methodology. Early Child Development and Care, 190(2), 1–14. link ↗ | Sacks, H., Schegloff, E. A., & Jefferson, G. (1974). A simplest systematics for the organization of turn-taking for conversation. Language, 50(4), 696–735. link ↗ |
| نامهای دیگر | PCA, collaborative conversation analysis, practitioner-involved CA, participatory CA | CA, talk-in-interaction, sequential analysis, interactional analysis |
| مرتبط≠ | 4 | 6 |
| خلاصه≠ | Participatory Conversation Analysis (PCA) extends classical Conversation Analysis by actively involving the people whose talk is being studied in the analytical process. Rather than treating analysis as the researcher's exclusive domain, PCA invites practitioners, community members, or research participants to co-review recordings or transcripts of their own interaction, contribute insider meanings, and collaboratively refine the interpretation of interactional patterns. The approach is widely used in education, healthcare communication, and professional learning contexts. | Conversation Analysis (CA) is a qualitative research method that examines the fine-grained sequential structure of naturally occurring talk and social interaction. Developed by sociologists Harvey Sacks, Emanuel Schegloff, and Gail Jefferson in the 1960s and 1970s, CA investigates how participants in a conversation accomplish social actions — such as invitations, refusals, or diagnoses — through the precise moment-by-moment organisation of their talk, including turn-taking, sequence structure, repair, and recipient design. |
| ScholarGateمجموعهداده ↗ |
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