1 / 10

Monitoring Cross Sector Language Learner Dialogues

Monitoring Cross Sector Language Learner Dialogues. Jane Hughes Lydia Buravova. Project Background. CROSSCALL - Cross Sector Computer Assisted Language Learning Linking school and university language students German, Spanish, Russian, Mandarin, Arabic Virtual learning environment (WebCT)

ollie
Télécharger la présentation

Monitoring Cross Sector Language Learner Dialogues

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Monitoring Cross Sector Language Learner Dialogues Jane Hughes Lydia Buravova CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  2. Project Background • CROSSCALL - Cross Sector Computer Assisted Language Learning • Linking school and university language students • German, Spanish, Russian, Mandarin, Arabic • Virtual learning environment (WebCT) • Mainly asynchronous discussion • MP3 files to exchange spoken messages • Both sides learn CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  3. Research background • Multilingual Internet (** Writing in English) • “Netspeak” or online written language • Language choice (eg Durham, 2003) • Code switching, (eg Danet, Herring, 2003) • Written and oral forms, (eg Warshauer et al) • How writers adapt to technical constraints, eg Greeklish • “Electronic literacy” • (How) should language learners be taught online communication in the target language? (Schetzer and Warschauer, 2000; Chen, 2006) • Collaboration between native speakers and language learners online (eg Lee, 2004) CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  4. Example CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  5. What to monitor? • Safety • Process of online communication • How relationships developed • Characteristics of language used • Students’ awareness about language use • Register • Use of target language and English • Roles and images • How the university students see their role • The image of themselves that the students create • Learning • What students in both sectors learned CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  6. Observations • Developing relationships • Initiating the dialogue • Pattern of questions and answers • Topics discussed • Features of more successful dialogues • University student role conceptions • Not teachers • Approach to giving help and making corrections CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  7. Language use • Mainly informal but some variation • Hola! Hi! Hallo, Hey! Guten Tag, Liebe Susan, no address • Bis bald, xxx, Liebe Grüße, schreib bald, deine Susan, viel Spass noch in der Schule • English mixed with target language in varying proportions • Errors • Internet and Texting features • Seufz, :)), Chats, :D CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  8. Examples • Student perceptions • call-discussionexamples.doc CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  9. Acknowledgements • Thanks to: • The language teachers and students at Elliot School, William Ellis School and Weald of Kent Grammar School • The UCL/SSEES university students • The project leader, Terry King • The funders, CfBT and UCL CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

  10. References • Chen, C-F. E. (2006). The Development of E-Mail Literacy: from Writing to Peers to Writing to Authority Figures. Language Learning & Technology, Vol.10, No.2, May 2006, pp.35-55 • Durham, Mercedes (2003). Language Choice on a Swiss Mailing List. JCMC (Journal of Computer Mediated Communication?), Vol 9, issue 1. • Danet, Brenda, Herring, Susan C. (2003). Introduction: The Multilingual Internet. JCMC 9 (1), November 2003 • Lee, Lina (2004). Learners’ Perspectives on Networked Collaborative Interaction with Native Speakers of Spanish in the US. Language Learning & Technology 8(1), January 2004, pp 83-100 • Shetzer, H., Warschauer, M. (2000): An Electronic Literacy Approach to Network-based Language Teaching. In Warschauer, M., Kern, R. (Eds.): Network based Language Teaching: Concepts and Practice. New York: Cambridge University Press • Mark Warschauer, Ghada R. El Said, Ayman Zohry: Language Choice Online: Globalization and Identity in Egypt CALL2006 Monitoring the Learner

More Related