通过Zoom教授土著语言振兴

Maya Daurio, Mark Turin
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在这篇由一名讲师和一名助教共同撰写的教学反思中,我们考虑了一些意想不到的机会,这些机会是我们在2020年9月至12月期间计划并随后开设的一门关于土著语言文献、保护和复兴的入门课程中提供的,可以让我们更深入地参与在线教学。我们参与了快速增长的关于在线教学转变的文献,并为数字技术介导的语言复兴新兴学术做出了贡献,这种学术在全球大流行之前就已经存在,并将持续下去。我们的评论涵盖了我们在2020年夏季的准备工作,以及我们对完全在线学习管理系统的适应,包括整合我们从教育资源、学术研究和同事那里学到的东西。我们强调我们如何培养一个以灵活性、同情心和响应性为中心的学习环境,同时承认这种新安排对教师和学生的挑战。最后,当我们反思在线教学环境的一些富有成效的方面时——包括适应性技术、翻转课堂以及同步和异步课堂会议之间的平衡——我们问,当面对面教学再次恢复时,哪些方面可以建设性地纳入面对面的课堂。
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Teaching Indigenous Language Revitalization over Zoom
In this teaching reflection, co-authored by an instructor and a teaching assistant, we consider some of the unanticipated openings for deeper engagement that the “pivot” to online teaching provided as we planned and then delivered an introductory course on Indigenous language documentation, conservation, and revitalization from September to December 2020. We engage with the fast-growing literature on the shift to online teaching and contribute to an emerging scholarship on language revitalization mediated by digital technologies that predates the global pandemic and will endure beyond it. Our commentary covers our preparation over the summer months of 2020 and our adaptation to an entirely online learning management system, including integrating what we had learned from educational resources, academic research, and colleagues. We highlight how we cultivated a learning environment centered around flexibility, compassion, and responsiveness, while acknowledging the challenges of this new arrangement for instructors and students alike. Finally, as we reflect on some of the productive aspects of the online teaching environment—including adaptable technologies, flipped classrooms, and the balance between synchronous and asynchronous class meetings—we ask which of these may be constructively incorporated into face-to-face classrooms when in-person teaching resumes once more.
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