629 research outputs found

    IT support for the learning of Chinese characters

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    A Network to Support Educational Changes

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    In 1998, there was a major shift in the medium of instruction in Hong Kong secondary schools from English to Chinese. This change had many educational advantages. However, its implementation was not without problem. For example, the general public will probably label those schools using Chinese (CMI schools) as inferior to those using English (EMI schools). More seriously, most of the teachers, with their own learning experience only in English, may not be able to use Chinese as a language for teaching their subject-specific knowledge. This paper reports the work of a computer network, specifically established to support the educational change and discusses the strategies on providing effective support to educational changes through computer networking. The most important contribution of the network lies in the knowledge creation and the growth of the CMI school community as a whole, collecting, uplifting and disseminating high quality pedagogical knowledge within the community. Close collaboration with the front-line teachers at schools has also been highly valued, hoping to tackle down-to-earth problems of the teachers.published_or_final_versio

    An analysis of the participation of an online educational discussion forum - the study of Hong Kong Cyber Campus Forum

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    Information technology is now widely used in the education sector, and online discussion forum has been regarded as a useful tool for education. A large number of online forums have been set up with an unexamined assumption that participants will learn through interacting with others in the forums. This paper reports a case study of the discussion forum of the Hong Kong Cyber Campus (www.hkcampus.net). It is the in one of the largest public educational discussion forums in Hong Kong set up jointly by local higher education institutions, to provide a venue for educators, teachers, students and parents to discuss about educational issues and the use of information technology for teaching and learning. The current study addresses the following issues: (1) What are the major objects of discussion in the forum? (2) How the structure of the forum may affect interactions between the different types of participants? (3) To what extent is online discussion conducive to conceptual learning of the participants? (4) What are the characteristics of the interactions of the participants in online forum? (5) How should the moderator act effectively to facilitate discussion? What kinds of moderator's messages will spark off more discussion? What kinds of messages tend to end the discussion? To address these research questions, we have conducted an analysis of the messages of the forum generated in its first twelve months from Feb.1999 to Feb.2000. Some of the findings are highlighted in this paper, namely: (1) The objects of discussion are mostly about everyday work and life of students and teachers; (2) The structure of the forum does affect the amount of interaction between different types of participants; (3) Online discussion affords gathering opinion, exchanging information and expressing feelings; (4) Online forum appears weak in resolving conflicting views. Participants seldom exhibit a change of their beliefs during the discussion. It also tends to polarize the discussion, lead the participants to extreme points of view. This is especially salient when the participants do not share a common experience of the issue. (5) The kind of moderator's messages that try to round up, make conclusion and provide authoritative information tend to terminate the discussion, while the expression of example/experience with open meaning tend to spark off more discussion.published_or_final_versio

    Understanding language teacher's culturally responsive teaching self-efficacy and its enhancement through learning study with young Chinese language learners

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    Paper Session - SIG L1 Teacher EducationBACKGROUND: Chinese language learners (CLLs) in Hong Kong mainly came from ethnic minorities (EMs) of South Asia. To preclude marginalization, education for EMs became a controversial issue. Frontline Chinese language teachers often encounter difficulties in teaching due to inadequate training. Though teachers play an important role in young CLL’s learning of ...postprin

    Project Go: Helping Children with ASD Learn Through their Special Interest in Transport

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    Poster presentation: School ProgrammeOrganized by JC A-Connect: Jockey Club Autism Support Networkpublished_or_final_versio

    Using a wiki-based collaborative process writing pedagogy to facilitate collaborative writing among Chinese primary school students

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    This case study explored collaborative writing in Chinese among 59 primary four Chinese students using a Wiki-based Collaborative Process Writing Pedagogy (WCPWP) in Shenzhen, China. It aimed mainly to design and orchestrate a WCPWP in order to facilitate students' Chinese writing. It investigated students' collaborative writing process and their performance on a wiki, and explored the perceptions and attitudes of the teacher and her students towards WCPWP. A wiki-based writing environment named Joyous Writing Club (JWC) was designed and developed using MediaWiki software. Data was collected from questionnaires, online wiki documents, interviews, and observations. The results illustrated students' collaborative writing process and their products on the wiki. Besides, the results showed that students perceived WCPWP was beneficial in boosting writing motivation, increasing group interactions, and extending the audience for their writing. This study may help primary educators gain a deeper understanding of the relationships between technology, pedagogy and education. It may also provide practical recommendations for primary school Chinese language teachers in the integration of Web 2.0 tools (wikis, Google Docs) as well as the use of effective pedagogical strategies in the teaching of Chinese writing.published_or_final_versio

    Students and teacher’s attitudes and perceptions toward collaborative writing with WIKI in a Primary Four Chinese classroom

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    This case study investigated the attitudes and perceptions of primary school students and their teacher toward collaborative writing using a wiki technology in a Chinese writing class in China. An online collaborative writing environment named “Joyous Writing Club”(JWC) was designed and developed using a wiki. Participants included 59 primary four students and their Chinese language teacher. The study adopted a mixed-methods design, using quantitative and qualitative data. A writing attitude test was administered to the students using a pretest-posttest design, and JWC was used by the participants for a period of two months. After that, a questionnaire using responses on a 5-point Likert scale was administered to examine the students’ perceptions on the use of the wiki-based collaborative writing environment. A questionnaire consisting of open-ended queries was also administered to the teacher to gain her insights on using JWC with her students. The results indicated that students showed improvement in writing attitudes after engaging in collaborative writing with wiki. Students’ responses to the questionnaire revealed that they perceived the collaborative writing using a wiki as beneficial in facilitating motivation to write, heightened group interactions, and widening the reading audience of their writings. Students’ positive perceptions on the use of JWC were also found to associate positively with students’ writing attitudes in the posttest. The strongest positive correlation was found between perceptions on motivation to write and writing attitudes. The teacher reported that students expressed higher interest in writing on JWC compared relative to writing on paper. She also indicated that factors such as the topic of the Chinese composition and students’ computer skills may affect the quality of collaborative writing with wiki. This study provides information that may help teachers and researchers to understand students’ responses towards collaborative writing with a wiki environment in a Chinese writing class, and the factors that may facilitate the effective use of such wiki environment.postprin

    Which Agenda? Medium of Instruction Policy in Post-1997 Hong Kong

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    The mandatory use of mother tongue education in Hong Kong after 1997 met strong objections from the local community. While the government put forward a comprehensive educational agenda to justify the implementation of the policy, this paper raises the question of whether the change in language policy was mainly driven by an educational agenda, or whether there were other underlying agendas. To address the question, the history of the medium of instruction in Hong Kong is reviewed, and the experience of three decolonised Asian countries, Malaysia, Singapore and India, is discussed. The paper suggests that the political agenda has always played an important role in language policy formulation and implementation. In view of the important role that language plays in nation building and social reconstruction, it is inevitable that Chinese medium instruction will become more and more important. How the government will balance the need to strengthen the national identity of Hong Kong people and the need to maintain the international out look and economic development of Hong Kong will have a major impact on there view of the new medium of instruction policy in 2001.published_or_final_versio

    South Asian students' educational experience and attainment: learning Chinese as a second/additional language in Hong Kong

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    Differential contribution of psycholinguistic and cognitive skills to written composition in Chinese as a second language

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    This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer via the DOI in this record.This study examined the contribution of the constructs of orthographic processing (orthographic choice and orthographic choice in context), syntactic processing (grammaticality and sentence integrity), and verbal working memory (two reading span indicators) to written Chinese composition (narration, explanation, and argumentation) in 129 fifteen-year-old L2 learners. A matrix task was also administered as a control task to tap cognitive flexibility. Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) analysis with written composition as a latent variable revealed orthographic processing and working memory as two significant, independent contributors, whereas the unique contribution of syntactic processing was not significant. Subsequent SEM analysis with narration, explanation, and argumentation as separate endogenous variables found varied patterns of the contribution of each latent predictor to written composition in different genres. These patterns are discussed in light of the importance of attention to learners’ developmental stage and genre-sensitive measures to capture the psycholinguistic and cognitive underpinnings of written composition in L2 Chinese
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