Language learning and technology. Student activities in web-based environments
Abstract
The impact of the web as a communicative arena, based on the use of
social software, has changed conditions for communication on all levels
of society; privately, at work and in education. This has opened up for
multicultural communication, frequently with English as the lingua franca.
Exploring how the web and web-based technologies afford learning activities
is something that is related to practical and theoretical interests in the
field of Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL). These interests are
also the foundation for this thesis. The aim is to contribute to the understanding
of how web-based environments can change the conditions for
language learning. Within a socio-cultural framework, the thesis explores
activities and student interaction in web-based learning environments in
language learning for engineering students in higher education in Sweden.
The main research question is how web-based language learning activities
contribute to the development of language competences. There are four
more specific questions: How are web-based technologies situated in language
learning environments? What forms of activities and student interaction
evolve? How can web-based peer reviewing contribute to language
learning? How can intercultural exchanges contribute to language learning?
The empirical foundation of the thesis comprises four case studies of
educational designs including student activities in blogs and wikis. Data
consists of logs of student driven web-based activities and interviews. The
first study investigates how students use a wiki as their joint workspace.
The results show that the students either use the web page or the discussion
forum on the wiki, entailing both a form-based and a content-based
focus. Three types of activity patterns emerge: contributing and writing
together; evaluating and peer reviewing; and arguing and discussing. The
second study explores rationalities of student co-production of texts on
a wiki. The patterns of interaction in groups can be characterized either
as co-operation or collaboration. The results show that the collaborating
groups are more frequent in giving peer response. When writing together,
collaboration with contributions from diverse perspectives changes the
dynamics not only of text production but the text in itself. This has potential
for language learning since the students become involved in many levels
of text production, from very detailed linguistic aspects to discursive
and semantic aspects. The third study investigates student interaction in a
poetry blog exchange with native-English speaking students from the US.
In the blogging activity, the students share their interpretation of poems
by a Swedish poet. The analysis of the blog postings uncovers four themes
of student interaction: blogging in an educational environment; displaying
cultural belonging; forming threads that thematize content and meaning of
poems; and discussions of language and translation issues in an intercultural
environment. Study four investigates an intercultural exchange, targeting
student peer-reviewing in a wiki. The procedure of giving comments
to and receiving comments from peer students from another culture offers
diversity to text revision processes. Being engaged in an intercultural peer
review exchange offers opportunities in getting an insight into different
ways of expression, conditions of giving and receiving feedback, cultural
differences when meeting someone from outside of one’s own disciplinary
field and from another country and with another language background.
This is in line with core issues of intercultural exchanges that concern mastering
expressions of other cultures than one’s own. The four studies contribute
to the understanding of how web-based environments can be used
in language learning. They display a range of productive student interaction
such as discussing, collaborating, and responding through text. In conclusion,
they demonstrate that educational designs utilizing web-based writing
technologies offer a space to develop discursive, linguistic and cultural
competences.
Parts of work
Bradley, L., Lindström, B., Rystedt, H., & Vigmo, S. (2011). Language learning in a wiki – Student contributions in a web based learning environment. Themes in Science and Technology Education, 3(1-2), 63-80. Bradley, L., Lindström, B., Rystedt, H., & Vigmo, S. (2010). Rationalities of collaboration for language learning in a wiki. ReCALL, 22(2), 247-265.::doi::10.1017/S0958344010000108 Bradley, L., Gustafsson, M., Lindström, B., & Rystedt, H. (2011). A design for cross-cultural exchange – An analysis of engineering students’ interaction with English majors in a poetry blog. In S. Thouësny & L. Bradley (Eds.), Second Language Teaching and Learning with Technology: Views of emergent researchers (pp. 95-122). Dublin: Research-publishing.net.::URL::http://research-publishing.net/publication/chapters/978-1-908416-00-1/6_LindaBradley_et_al.pdf Bradley, L. (2013). Peer-reviewing in an intercultural – student interaction and reflections. Accepted for publication in Computers and Composition.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education, Communication and Learning ; Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Disputation
Kl 13.15 i sal BE015, Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Date of defence
2013-04-19
linda.bradley@chalmers.se
View/ Open
Date
2013-04-03Author
Bradley, Linda
Keywords
language learning
web-based technology
learning activities
student integration
peer reviewing
cultural exchange
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-739-1
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences
330
Language
eng