Mohammed, Nuru (PhD)Teshome, Getachew2021-06-022023-12-052021-06-022023-12-052019-12http://etd.aau.edu.et/handle/123456789/26612he objective of the study was to explore the nature and role of classroom interaction in the development of early grade reading skills. Specifically, it tried to address mediational strategies teachers and students used in creating meaning and understanding, theoretical assumptions that inform teachers’ classroom practices and the nature of classroom activities in early grade reading classes. The study focused on teacher-student and student-student interactions as mediators and mediatee in co-constructing meaning and skills. To this end, ethnohraphic research design was employed on Grades 1, 2, and 3 students at Abdi Bori Primary School at Mendi, West Wollega. The school was selected purposively as it was a private school catering for better quality education than other schools in the district. To achieve its objectives, qualitative data were collected using different instruments, such as non-participant observation with field notes, interview and document analysis and analyzed qualitatively. The result uncovered that the three classrooms observed were mostly teacher-controlled and textbook-directed that limited students’ active participation. It revealed a mixed mode of teaching: traditional transmissive, constructivist(joint discovery) and dialogic methods with more focus on the former. Teachers controlled content and direction of the lesson through frequent use of display questions that limited extended classroom interaction. However, when constructivist approach was employed, classroom interaction created better learning opportunities and co-construction of knowledge and skills, through the proper mediation of more knowledgeable others, who used both verbal and non-verbal modes of interaction. Mediation strategies used by participant teachers and students, like repetition, summarization, prosodic chopping, elicitation and uptake questions, significantly contributed to the meaning making and skill development processes. The study also disclosed and acknowledged the multimodal nature of early grade reading lessons, like physical objects, verbal cues, images, audio, etc that assisted literacy skill acquisition and development. Since the environment that surrounds children—inside and outside of school—is not only print-rich but also rich with multiple modes of expression, children combined different sign systems to represent, interpret and share meaning with others. Moreover, the participants demonstrated numerous strategies such as graphophonic, semantic and syntactic cueing systems in constructing meanings of what they read. The study also showed disparity between the teachers' perceptions on the role of classroom interaction in developing early grade reading skills and their actual classroom practices. Based on the finding, it was concluded that classroom interaction, and students and teacher mediations immensely contribute to the development of early grade reading skills.en-USrole of classroom interaction in the development of early grade reading skillsExploring the Nature and Role of Classroom Interaction in Developing Early Grade Reading skills: The case of Afan Oromo mother tongueThesis