168 research outputs found

    Using ICT to contact the target culture: teachers’ view

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    While information and communication technologies (ICT) have made speakers of and content from the target foreign culture easily accessible to learners and teachers alike, they may cause conditions for FL teachers. This study sought to uncover the nature and extent of FL teachers' use of ICT to contact the target culture, both for instruction and teachers’ informal lifelong learning. By means of a survey, interviews and a mini-group interview with students, we portrayed the FL teachers' knowledge, beliefs, context, and behaviour in terms of ICT, and scrutinized how they are related. Findings showed that while teachers and students are sufficiently ICT-skilled and equipped, informal exchanges on the Internet are the exception. Excerpts from the interviews are presented in association with quantitative results

    Formative e-feedback in collaborative writing assignments: the effect of the process and time

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    Writing is one of the most common activities in higher education, and is essential if we are situated in virtual learning environments based on written communication. However, the fact that it is a customary activity does not mean that it is specifically taught or that guidance is given to help students in the academic writing process (Lonka, 2003). In fact, the opposite often happens; students are already expected to know how to write in different contexts. Nevertheless, students require specific support from teachers and their peers to enable them to deal with the processes and products of academic communication. Feedback could be one type of support, seen as a joint activity which entails active interaction between students and the teacher, including how students receive and utilise the feedback (Dysthe, 2007), but not all kinds of feedback are effective.This study thus explores the impact of formative e-feedback on students' texts written collaboratively in an online learning environment and also it explores when the e-feedback takes place in a way which contributes to the inclusion of more complex arguments in academic texts. A proactive reaction by the students was caused in response to feedback. This happened when they received messages questioning their work but also suggesting changes, in addition to correction. The pattern that seems to generate quality changes in collaborative text revision processes is initiated by teacher elaboration feedback, which generates discussion among the students and, as a result, leads to contextualised changes to the text.Proposing regular feedback that requires discussion among the students turns out to be an essential strategy to encourage high quality revision of texts written collaboratively in an online learning environment

    Recommendations on Formative Assessment and Feedback Practices for stronger engagement in MOOCs

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    Many publications and surveys refer to the high drop out rate in Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) which is around 90%, especially if we compare the number of students who register against those who finish. Working towards improving student engagement in MOOCs, we focus on providing specific research-based recommendations on formative assessment and feedback practices that can advance student activity. In this respect, we analysed some significant research papers on formative assessment and feedback methods applicable to face-to-face teaching environments that advance student engagement, and concluded with related requirements and conditions that can be applied also to MOOCs. We also analysed 4050 comments and reviews of the seven most active and highly rated MOOCs (6 Coursera ones and 1 from EdX) provided by the students who have mainly completed those courses via CourseTalk. Based on this content analysis, we have formulated fourteen recommendations that support also the requirements/conditions of our conceptual and theoretical framework analysis. The results obtained give some light in a rather unexplored research area, which is the research on formative assessment and feedback practices specifically for stronger engagement in MOOCs

    Analysis of feedback processes in online group interaction : a methodological model

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    The aim of this article is to present a methodological model to analyze students' group interaction to improve their essays in online learning environments, based on asynchronous and written communication. In these environments teacher and student scaffolds for discussion are essential to promote interaction. One of these scaffolds can be the feedback. Research on feedback processes has predominantly focused on feedback design rather than on how students utilize feedback to improve learning. This methodological model fills this gap contributing to analyse the implementation of the feedback processes while students discuss collaboratively in a specific case of writing assignments. A review of different methodological models was carried out to define a framework adjusted to the analysis of the relationship of written and asynchronous group interaction, and students' activity and changes incorporated into the final text. The model proposed includes the following dimensions: 1) student participation 2) nature of student learning and 3) quality of student learning. The main contribution of this article is to present the methodological model and also to ascertain the model's operativity regarding how students incorporate such feedback into their essays

    Technology educational affordance: Bridging the gap between patterns of interaction and technology usage

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    This paper reports on an empirical and descriptive investigation into how teachers and learners use technology in three prototypical learning activities in a higher educational online learning environment. Additionally, the relationship between the educational uses of technology and the overall educational patterns of interaction between teachers and learners, and among learners themselves was analysed. Detailed teacher and learner self-reports about their teaching and learning activity; the asynchronous written messages teachers and learners sent as educational interaction in the online llearning environment; and documents produced by students were all obtained. The results from the three learning activities indicated six overall educational uses of technology in an online learning environment. Moreover, the results also indicated differences in technology usage in some different patterns of educational interaction in each learning activity. In conclusion, we argue that the notion of technology educational affordance is useful as an effective bridge between the real use of technology and instructional aims. Therefore the distribution of educational uses of technology is not only related to some attributes of both technology and instruction but also to its interaction

    La recerca a la universitat

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    Les creences del professorat sobre l'ensenyament de la gramàtica a primària, secundària i en l'ensenyament d'adults

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    L’article s’insereix en la tradició d’estudis sobre els sabers i les creences del professorat que indaguen en les concepcions sobre l’ensenyament i l’aprenentatge com a punt de referència per a la planificació de la millora dels criteris d’intervenció a les aules. Recull dos estudis paral·lels que pretenen conèixer la cognició i les pràctiques dels docents en relació amb l’ensenyament de la gramàtica, un sobre una mostra de professorat de primària i de secundaria encarregat de l’ensenyament del català i el castellà, i un altre sobre una mostra de professorat de català com a segona llengua en l’àmbit de l’ensenyament d’adults. En tots dos casos, les respostes a un qüestionari sobre el paper de la gramàtica en l’ensenyament de la llengua i sobre les pràctiques habituals permeten establir una tipologia en què es distingeixen perfils docents diferenciats

    University teacher competencies in a virtual teaching/learning environment: Analysis of a teacher training experience

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    This paper attempts to shed light on the competencies a teacher must have in order to teach in online university environments. We will relate a teacher training experience, which was designed taking into account the methodological criteria established in line with previous theoretical principles. The main objective of our analysis is to identify the achievements and difficulties of a specific formative experience, with the ultimate goal of assessing the suitability of this conceptualmethodological framework for the design of formative proposals aiming to contribute to the development of teacher competencies for virtual environments.This paper attempts to shed light on the competencies a teacher must have in order to teach in online university environments. We will relate a teacher training experience, which was designed taking into account the methodological criteria established in line with previous theoretical principles. The main objective of our analysis is to identify the achievements and difficulties of a specific formative experience, with the ultimate goal of assessing the suitability of this conceptualmethodological framework for the design of formative proposals aiming to contribute to the development of teacher competencies for virtual environments

    ¿Cómo implicar a los estudiantes para que utilicen el feedback online?

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    Despite a firm commitment to the implementation of continuous and formative assessment in Higher Education, in practice, this type of assessment is still not a reality. In this assessment framework, feedback processes take on a key relevance as learning facilitators. However, recent research on feedback concludes that students do not use it and they do not engage with it. The aim of this study is to provide evidence on how the strategy based upon the resubmission of an assignment can promote students’ engagement with feedback in online or hybrid environments. To achieve this aim, a quasi-experiment with pre-post measurements was designed. The sample consisted of 76 students who received the intervention (resubmission of the assignment after receiving feedback) and 60 students in the control group. Results show that resubmission is associated with higher levels of engagement with feedback. The discussion highlights the relevance of the results in online contexts or with intensive use of technology, and the potential to transfer them to educational practice. This, in turn, has an impact on the regulation and design of actual effective training practices that can eventually contribute to learning.A pesar de una apuesta firme por la implantación de una evaluación continua y formativa en el contexto universitario, en la práctica, este tipo de evaluación todavía hoy no es una realidad. En este marco de evaluación, los procesos de feedback toman una relevancia clave como facilitadores del aprendizaje. Sin embargo, los resultados de las investigaciones que se han llevado a cabo en los últimos años sobre el feedback concluyen que los estudiantes no lo utilizan, es decir, no lo aprovechan para mejorar su aprendizaje. El objetivo del presente artículo es aportar evidencias sobre cómo la estrategia basada en la reelaboración del trabajo académico puede promover la implicación de los estudiantes con el feedback en entornos virtuales o híbridos. Para dar respuesta a este objetivo se diseñó un cuasi-experimento con medidas pre-post. La muestra estuvo compuesta por 76 estudiantes que recibieron la intervención (reelaboración del trabajo a partir del feedback recibido y entrega final) y 60 del grupo control. Los resultados ponen de manifiesto que la reelaboración del trabajo va asociada a niveles más altos de implicación con el feedback. La discusión sitúa la relevancia de los resultados en contextos virtuales o con un uso intensivo de la tecnología y su potencialidad para transferirlos a la práctica educativa, por su impacto en la regulación y en el diseño de prácticas realmente formativas que contribuyan al aprendizaje
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