编辑

IF 4.6 1区 文学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Recall Pub Date : 2020-09-01 DOI:10.1017/s0958344020000166
David Barr
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自上一期ReCALL以来,全球范围内的新冠肺炎大流行影响了我们所有人的生活。许多教育领域的结果是越来越多地使用远程学习工具,教育工作者和学生现在都在以去年年底可能无法想象的方式使用数字技术。我们ReCALL编辑团队希望您和您的家人在这个前所未有的时代安然无恙。Julian ChengJiang Chen在论文中探讨了潜在的虚拟教室,他考虑了3D多用户虚拟环境的使用,如第二人生。作者确定了任务规划活动,这些活动可以包括在基于课堂或基于3D的虚拟环境中,以优化学习者的语言体验质量。该论文的结论是,这种对物理或虚拟课堂环境的适应性具有重要意义,当我们适应新的教学方法时,这种适应性可能特别及时。任何虚拟课堂成功的一个关键特征是学习者对其价值的感知和态度。Liam Murray、Marta Giralt和Silvia Benini在研究技术的分心性质及其对学生学习的影响时强调了这一点。作者发现,学生们通常不知道自己在网上花了多长时间,但得出的结论是,学习者确实了解技术可能对他们的学习造成的潜在干扰,学习者需要具备关键的数字素养,才能最大限度地发挥技术对语言学习的好处。Shu Li Lai和Jason S.Chang在研究词汇搭配工具的文章中继续探讨了学生对使用技术进行语言学习的态度和反应这一主题。他们的研究发现,该工具在帮助学生解决搭配问题方面很有效,从而鼓励学生使用该工具。他们的文章提供了一个更及时的例子,说明学生的态度如何影响对该技术的参与水平,而这反过来又是成功采用和有效使用该技术的关键。Ward Peeters和Marilize Pretorius也探讨了有效参与技术的问题,他们讨论了在语言学习中使用社交网站的潜力。他们认为,关于社交网络和Web2.0对创造协作学习机会的好处的研究还没有定论。他们的工作强调了将教师纳入在线虚拟实践社区的必要性,例如Facebook上提供的社区,同时纳入关键的学习活动,以避免“失败书”效应。在本期的最后一篇文章中,在更广阔的世界探索技术促进学习的潜力的背景下,Judith Buendgens Kosten认为,计算机辅助语言学习(CALL)研究传统上侧重于使用技术教授一种语言。作者解释说,CALL的研究和开发可以避免这种单语偏见,并为多语言CALL铺平道路:也许这是一个及时结束当前问题的地方,为CALL研究提供了一个新的、潜在的方向,因为这个世界必须迅速适应新的操作方式。
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Editorial
Since the last issue of ReCALL, the worldwide COVID-19 pandemic has affected all of our lives. The result for many areas of education has been the increased use of remote learning tools, and educators and students alike are now using digital technologies in ways that may have been inconceivable at the end of last year. We, in the ReCALL editorial team, hope that you and your families are safe and well in these unprecedented times. An insight into a potential virtual classroom is explored in the paper by Julian ChengChiang Chen, who considers the use of a 3Dmulti-user virtual environment, such as Second Life. The author identifies task planning activities that can be included in either a classroom-based or a 3D-based virtual environment to optimise the quality of the learners’ linguistic experience. The paper concludes that there are significant implications for such adaptability to physical or virtual classroom environments, which are perhaps particularly timely as we adapt to newmethods of delivery. A key feature of the success of any virtual classroom is the perception of its value to learners and their attitudes. This is highlighted by Liam Murray, Marta Giralt and Silvia Benini in their study of the distractive nature of technology and its impact on student learning. The authors find that students are often unaware of how long they spend online, but conclude that learners do have an understanding of the potential disruption that technology can cause to their learning and that learners need to have a critical digital literacy in order to maximise the benefits of technology for their language learning. The theme of student attitude and reactions to the use of technology for language learning is continued by Shu-Li Lai and Jason S. Chang in their article examining a lexical collocation tool. Their work found that the tool was efficient in helping students to solve collocation problems, thereby encouraging engagement with the tool. Their article provides a further timely example of how student attitude influences level of engagement with the technology, and this, in turn, is key to its successful adoption and effective pedagogical use. The issue of effective engagement with technology is also explored by Ward Peeters and Marilize Pretorius, who discuss the potential for using social networking sites in language learning. They argue that research into the benefits of social networking and Web 2.0 for creating collaborative learning opportunities has been inconclusive. Their work highlights the need for inclusion of the teacher in virtual communities of practice online, such as those offered on Facebook, along with the incorporation of key learning activities to avoid the “fail-book” effect. In the final article of this issue and, in the context of a wider world exploring the increasing potential of technology to facilitate learning, Judith Buendgens-Kosten argues that computerassisted language learning (CALL) research has traditionally focused on the use of technology to teach one language. The author explains that research and development in CALL can avoid this monolingual bias and paves the way for multilingual CALL: perhaps a timely place to conclude the current issue, with a new, potential direction for CALL research in a world that is having to quickly adjust to new ways of operating.
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来源期刊
Recall
Recall Multiple-
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
4.40%
发文量
17
期刊最新文献
Forty-two years of computer-assisted language learning research: A scientometric study of hotspot research and trending issues Different interlocutors, different EFL interactional strategies: A case study of intercultural telecollaborative projects in secondary classrooms Examining the relationships among motivation, informal digital learning of English, and foreign language enjoyment: An explanatory mixed-method study ReCALL editorial September 2023 issue Sampling and randomisation in experimental and quasi-experimental CALL studies: Issues and recommendations for design, reporting, review, and interpretation
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