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Eeyore and the pixel dropout: what’s wrong with technology-enhanced language learning? Jim Coleman, The Open University, UK
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Indian Context 2006 Desktop PCs +27% Internet +33% Servers +81% Notebooks +144% 2007 ‘Year of Broadband’ Target 20m subscribers by 2010 (ambitious) Current 8m subscribers (2.3m connections) 60m+ internet access by end 2007
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Pixel drop-out 1 in 2,359,296 pixels Perfectionist – unrealistic approach to TELL Consumerist – learner as customer
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Enthusiast Expert Reinventor of wheels Not-invented-here syndrome Supply-side approach Managerialist - Remember the language laboratory?
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Pedagogue Teacher beliefs – strong and persistent Transmission model of learning Fixed model of target language Classroom as locus of learning
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Technophile (geek/real world) Rapid evolution of hardware – Democratisation + capacity + mobility + convergence + standardisation + ephemerality of platform Rapid evolution of affordances, e.g. blog, vidcasts, wikis Information sources UGC Social networking Continuous Partial Attention (Linda Stone, 1997)
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Research context Histories of CALL: Levy 1997, Warschauer & Kern 2000, Chapelle 2001, Beatty 2003, Jung 2005, Levy & Stockwell 2006, Lamy & Hampel 2007 Marginalisation (Coleman 2005) Atheoretical early research
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Research context Computer as tutor (stand-alone) Computer as resource (input) Computer as publisher (output) Computer as medium (CMC)
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Research context Poor research design (small sample, uncontrolled variables…) Hexe Hilde syndrome (teacher-researcher) Mekon syndrome…
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The Mekon
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Research context Cognitive SLA > sociocultural SLA Autonomy, affect (motivation, anxiety), strategies, multimodality. Synchronous vs. asynchronous Anonymity = security or discomfort? Meaning of silence Online contexts - Email, tandem, online forums, chat, blog, audio-conference, video-conference, virtual worlds
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Research context CMC is good –Increased opportunities for TL communication –Increased motivation to communicate –Lower anxiety –Learning community –Higher-level learning
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Research context CMC is bad –Bizarre language variety – neither S nor W –New literacy for new culture – neither C1 nor C2 –Text-dominated at present –Lacks paralinguistic signs –Negative affect – technophobia, frustration (HCI) –Technology drives pedagogy
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The Open University First students admitted 1971 200,000 students (8,000 in languages since 1995) All part-time, distance taught: supported open learning Open as to people, places, methods, ideas www.open.ac.uk Coleman (2006) Fremdsprachen aus der Ferne
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The Open University ‘teacher’s voice’ embedded in team-written materials (text, audio, video, website) > open content Tutor feedback on written and spoken TMAs C20 hours a year f2f or online tuition (voluntary) Learning communities (16,000 First Class conferences) Moodle from 2007 Lyceum: synchronous audiographic tutorial environment FlashMeeting: synchronous enhanced videoconference
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Open University research Development of audiographic conferencing (Hampel & Hauck 2004, Hauck & Hampel 2005) Tutor role and training (Hampel 2003, Hampel & Stickler 2005, Hauck & Stickler 2006) Autonomy (Hurd 2005, Murphy 2005, 2007, 2008) Task design (Duensing et al. 2006, Hampel 2006, Lamy 2006) Learner beliefs (Murphy 2005, Hurd 2006)
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Open University research Affect and cognitive strategies (Hauck 2005, Hauck & Hurd 2005, Hurd 2007) Online interactions (Hampel et al. 2005, Hauck 2007, Heins et al. 2007, Lamy 2004) Multimodality (Hampel & Hauck 2006, Lamy 2006)
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Open University research Sociocultural approach Several languages, large numbers Face-to-face, blended, online learning Quantitative and qualitative approaches Mobile devices, instant messaging, social semiotics
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Open University research Spoken Online Learning Events 22/23 June 2007 Cynthia White, Dorothy Chun, Glenn Stockwell Available online at http://www.open.ac.uk/baal-cupseminar2007-sole/
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Online learning
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On-lion learning
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Intervultural communication
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j.a.coleman@open.ac.uk
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