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Abstract

In many types of embodied skills instruction, the learnables-that is, the local and jointly negotiated foci of instruction-emerge from a combination between a pre-existing lesson plan and the spontaneous interaction between teacher and student. Through the analytical lens of Conversation Analysis, this paper investigates the interspecies instruction setting of horse-riding lessons and shows how here, it is not only the human teachers and learners that determine the emergence of new learnables but also the horses. Horses' actions can initiate new courses of action in a lesson, and horses can thus become interactional partners in the instructional project. Horse-led learnables can be initiated in at least three ways: through horses' displays of mental or physical states that pre-date the instruction sequence; through actions that respond to local contingencies of the instruction sequence; and through actions that respond specifically to the rider's actions. In the last case, their responses become diagnostic of the rider's mistakes. In all three cases, the human participants take their cue from the horse and base new learnables on horses' actions. Human-led learnables can be adjusted, changed, replaced, or abandoned completely in response to horses. The study broadens the emerging field of interspecies pragmatics to include instructional interactions involving the triad of human-human-horse triad.

Keywords

conversation analysis; interspecies interaction; instruction; horse-riding lessons

Published in

Animals
2025, volume: 15, number: 10, article number: 1418
Publisher: MDPI

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Animal and Dairy Science
Pedagogy

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/ani15101418

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/142103