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Discourse Acts in Antenatal Clinic Literacy Classroom in South-Western Nigeria
Abstract
This
study examines the organization of discourse in antenatal classrooms in south-western Nigeria.
Antenatal literacy classrooms are classes organized in hospitals and health
centres for pregnant women to intimate them with the necessary health
information needed in pregnancy. The data for this study were randomly selected
from series of data recorded during some antenatal classes in some selected
hospitals in Ile-Ife and its environs, all in south-western Nigeria. The data consist of tape
recordings of the classroom sessions and observational notes. The study reveals
that three categories of discourse act were most prominent in the data -
informative, elicitation and directive. This shows that the antenatal educators
were more active in the classes than the students. They maximized the use of
their power in discourse, which gives them the [+ HIGHER] role. They therefore
had the privilege to talk while the mothers listened. This places the pregnant
women at the disadvantage of being passive learners, who cannot see the
knowledge being passed across beyond the context of the class. Despite that
they have access to information, they are not adequately empowered to influence
the society with what they are being exposed to. Their perception of their role
in the discourse was that of listeners. The findings have significant
implications for health literacy programmes in Nigeria. It clearly shows that
health literacy programmes, as we have observed in antenatal classrooms exist
only as an aspect of functional health literacy - the aspect that recognizes
that pregnant women need to know about their health by listening to experts. This
makes the practice, as it is essentially transactional. The study concludes
that for antenatal classrooms to achieve their goal of health security of
pregnant women and their foetus, they have to be more interactive. There must
be a departure from the lecture method used now to a method that actually
involves the mothers.
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