在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,重新思考在线教学的自我、存在和参与

IF 0.9 Q2 LINGUISTICS Australian Review of Applied Linguistics Pub Date : 2023-09-21 DOI:10.1075/aral.23008.one
Fiona O’Neill, Timothy James McGrath
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引用次数: 0

摘要

COVID-19大流行期间向在线学习的转变对教育工作者来说是一次学习经历。虽然在线学习并不新鲜,但突然失去熟悉的线索对学习者和教师来说都是一个突出的挑战。本文从五位教育工作者的叙述中探讨了语言在澳大利亚大学虚拟课堂中的重要性。该分析借鉴了活动类型(Levinson, 1979)、戏剧自我(Goffman, 1959)和学习作为一个相互的、意义创造和解释过程(Scarino, 2014)的概念。研究结果表明,参与者通过发展重新思考自我、存在和参与与学习者互动的方式来应对他们遇到的挑战和可能性。我们认为,这一过程涉及在线教学和学习的跨文化取向,这是反思性实践、信任关系和教学、学习和知识共享理解的关键,远远超出了疫情范围。
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Rethinking self, presence, and participation in online teaching and learning during the COVID-19 pandemic
Abstract The shift to online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic has been a learning experience for educators. While online learning is not new, the sudden loss of familiar cues has highlighted challenges for learners and teachers. This paper focuses on the significance of language in virtual classrooms in an Australian university in the narrative accounts elicited from five educators. The analysis drew on notions of activity types ( Levinson, 1979 ), the dramaturgic self ( Goffman, 1959 ), and learning as a reciprocal, meaning-making, and interpretive process ( Scarino, 2014 ). The findings demonstrate that the participants responded to the challenges and possibilities they encountered by developing ways of rethinking self, presence, and participation in interaction with learners. We argue that this process involves an intercultural orientation to teaching and learning in online settings that is key to reflective practice, relationships of trust and shared understandings in teaching, learning, and knowing, well beyond the pandemic.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.70
自引率
8.30%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: The Australian Review of Applied Linguistics (ARAL) is the preeminent journal of the Applied Linguistics Association of Australia (ALAA). ARAL is a peer reviewed journal that promotes scholarly discussion and contemporary understandings of language-related matters with a view to impacting on real-world problems and debates. The journal publishes empirical and theoretical research on language/s in educational, professional, institutional and community settings. ARAL welcomes national and international submissions presenting research related to any of the major sub-disciplines of Applied Linguistics as well as transdisciplinary studies. Areas of particular interest include but are not limited to: · Analysis of discourse and interaction · Assessment and evaluation · Bi/multilingualism and bi/multilingual education · Corpus linguistics · Cognitive linguistics · Language, culture and identity · Language maintenance and revitalization · Language planning and policy · Language teaching and learning, including specific languages and TESOL · Pragmatics · Research design and methodology · Second language acquisition · Sociolinguistics · Language and technology · Translating and interpreting.
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