Digital Teaching and Learning: Perspectives for English Language Education (eBook)

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2021 | 1. Auflage
298 Seiten
Narr Francke Attempto (Verlag)
978-3-8233-0209-4 (ISBN)

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The ongoing digitalization of social environments and personal lifeworlds has made it crucial to pinpoint the possibilities of digital teaching and learning also in the context of English language education. This book offers university students, trainee teachers, in-service teachers and teacher educators an in-depth exploration of the intricate relationship between English language education and digital teaching and learning. Located at the intersection of research, theory and teaching practice, it thoroughly legitimizes the use of digital media in English language education and provides concrete scenarios for their competence-oriented and task-based classroom use.

Christiane Lütge is Professor at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich (LMU), where she holds the Chair of Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL). Her areas of expertise in research and teaching include digital literacy and literary learning, literature in foreign language teaching and learning (entailing digital literatures), as well as global citizenship education and transcultural learning in EFL. Thorsten Merse is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the field of TEFL at the University of Munich, LMU, Germany. In his research and teaching, he engages with digital education and teachers' digital competences, cultural and literary learning in ELT, as well as citizenship concepts in TEFL. In his PhD thesis from 2017 titled Other Others, Different Differences: Queer Perspectives on Teaching English as a Foreign Language, he pinpointed a queer-informed renegotiation of inter- and transcultural learning within ELT pedagogy.

Christiane Lütge is Professor at the Ludwig-Maximilians-University of Munich (LMU), where she holds the Chair of Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL). Her areas of expertise in research and teaching include digital literacy and literary learning, literature in foreign language teaching and learning (entailing digital literatures), as well as global citizenship education and transcultural learning in EFL. Thorsten Merse is a Postdoctoral Research Associate in the field of TEFL at the University of Munich, LMU, Germany. In his research and teaching, he engages with digital education and teachers' digital competences, cultural and literary learning in ELT, as well as citizenship concepts in TEFL. In his PhD thesis from 2017 titled Other Others, Different Differences: Queer Perspectives on Teaching English as a Foreign Language, he pinpointed a queer-informed renegotiation of inter- and transcultural learning within ELT pedagogy.

1 Introduction - Digital Teaching and Learning: Perspectives for English Language Education
2 Designing mobile language learning scenarios with digital tools
3 Artificial Intelligence in the EFL classroom: Clarifications, potentials and limitations
4 Diversifying Cultural Learning in the Digital Age
5 Doing Gender, Doing Identity: Performativity in Digital Spaces
6 Digital Media Competences in a Global World
7 Literature in the Digital EFL Classroom
8 Multimodal Texts and Digital Literature
9 Differentiation Through Digital Teaching and Learning
10 Digital Teaching and Learning in the Primary EFL Classroom
11 Conclusion and Future Perspectives

[für aktuelles Inhaltsverzeichnis siehe im Titelordner]

In Dialogue with Nicky Hockly


Nicky Hockly

For this interview, the editors of this volume had the chance to speak with Nicky Hockly, a global expert on digital language education and Director of Pedagogy of The Consultants-E. In this dialogue, Nicky Hockly offered insights into the past and future of digital education and her current work on digital literacies.

 

Christiane Lütge and Thorsten Merse: From 1997 to 2002, you worked as the Academic Director of one of the first fully online MA programmes for English Language Teaching, and you have paved the way towards digital education ever since. In your professional experience, what were the ‘digital hopes’ you had in 1997?

 

Nicky Hockly: Fully online degree programmes were relatively new back in 1997, when I started teaching online. Although we had an adequate LMS (Learning Management System), the emphasis was still very much on asynchronous online communication. For example, our MA students would typically read texts and then take part in moderated forum discussions. There was some multimedia available in the form of audio and video, but it was not as easy to produce then as it is now. Our students accessed course content via desktop or laptop computers – mobile technology was still in its infancy, and Internet connected mobile devices only started to make an appearance in the early 2000s. In our online MA programme we did hold regular synchronous (real-time) small-group tutorial discussions, but the only way we could do this was via text. We had to use MSN Messenger, as tools like Skype were simply not around. You can imagine how slow and cumbersome it was to hold tutorial discussions in real-time via text with groups of up to 10 MA students who had plenty of interesting and complex things to say. I experienced at first hand all of the typical text-related communication issues, such as topic decay (students going off topic in their discussions), overlapping turns (students typing responses over each other) and lag (long pauses while students typed out whole paragraphs). And students who were proficient typists had the advantage over those (like myself) whose typing skills left a lot to be desired! We developed quite detailed ‘chat protocols’ to manage these real time text chats, so that these group text chats worked as well as possible. But it was not ideal to have to hold real-time tutorials via text chat.

My biggest hope back then was that we could find some way of communicating via audio in real-time via the Internet. Although telephone conference calls already existed, these were far too expensive for us to seriously consider for our students. Our MA students were based all over Europe and in Latin America, so it simply wasn’t feasible cost-wise to use telephone conference calls. Skype came along in 2003; these sorts of VoIP (voice over Internet Protocol) tools marked a revolutionary moment by making real-time audio communication in online teacher development accessible to all. I was very lucky to experience the ‘before’, ‘during’ and ‘after’ of real-time computer-mediated communication. ‘Before’ we had to use text chat, the ‘during’ phase enabled us to use audio via VoIP tools, and the ‘after’ phase consists of videoconferencing made possible by video compression and high-speed internet. Widespread affordable videoconferencing was a distant dream back in 1997! And now, thankfully, it’s commonplace.

 

CL and TM: Looking back, what are the most exciting developments in the field of digital learning and teaching over the past years?

 

NH: For me, the most exciting development is undoubtedly the rise of mobile technologies. Mobile technology has seen us integrate a range of digital tools into our daily lives, for personal and professional use, to a level that was unthinkable just two decades ago. What’s more, before mobile, the geographical digital divide was much wider. When I first started working online in 1997, getting online required relatively expensive access to infrastructure such as wired Internet connectivity, and of course access to expensive hardware in the form of PCs and laptops. With the advent of mobile technologies, many developing countries have been able to leapfrog over the need for expensive wired internet infrastructure, and have moved directly to mobile technologies.

And of course, the longer that mobile technology has been around, the cheaper it has become. Some smart phones are now relatively inexpensive, certainly compared to when they first came out. Even simple internet-enabled ‘feature phones’ give users access to email and multimedia in the form of audio and photos. This doesn’t mean that there is equal access to the internet and devices worldwide, but the gap has narrowed over the past few decades, and mobile technology has played a significant role in this.

In terms of access to online language learning and online teacher development, mobile technology and Web 2.0 enabled access to a huge range of resources for learning. The rise of social networks, too, has seen teachers and learners able to access personal learning networks, and to connect with other learners and teachers all over the world. Continual professional development for teachers, much of it free, is now available through a tap on a mobile device screen.

I started using mobile devices with language learners early on, and undertook a research project for The International Research Foundation (TIRF) in 2012, which resulted in the development of a framework for effective mobile-based task design for language learners. You can read the research paper ‘Designer Learning: The Teacher as Designer of Mobile-based Classroom Learning Experiences’ online: www.tirfonline.org/publications/mobile-assisted-language-learning/designer-learning-the-teacher-as-designer-of-mobile-based-classroom-learning-experiences/. Gavin Dudeney and I subsequently wrote a teachers’ resource book called Going Mobile (2013, Delta Publishing) to help teachers understand the potential of mobile devices, and to provide activity ideas and guidelines on how to use them effectively in the classroom. I have always been interested in the possibilities that mobile devices bring to classroom learning, and I believe that mobile devices have plenty of potential to support language learning when used effectively with well-designed tasks. To my mind, mobile technology is still the single most exciting technology development we’ve seen.

 

CL and TM: Your own work is closely associated with the model of digital literacies you developed together with Mark Pegrum and Gavin Dudeney. What has originally caused you to develop this model, and what aspects did you feel needed integrating into current revisions of this model?

 

NH: Literacy has always been a central concern of formal schooling. In the past literacy included learning how to read and write, numeracy, and media literacies (e.g. looking at traditional media such as TV or newspapers with a critical eye). With the advent of digital technologies and the Internet, it has been apparent for some time that children need to learn additional literacies in order to thrive in our modern hyper-connected and digital world. Hence the focus on digital literacies reflected now in most educational curricula around the world, at primary, secondary and tertiary level.

‘Digital literacies’ is an umbrella term, and as such, it is somewhat vague. Although almost everyone agrees that we need to be digitally literate, exactly what that consists of is less clear, despite the existence of numerous frameworks. Our model of digital literacies is a construct that tries to break down the rather vague term ‘digital literacies’ into smaller and more understandable competences or sub-skills. Our model groups these sub-skills (or ‘literacies’) into four main areas: 1) communication; 2) information; 3) collaboration; and 4) (re)design. We consider these four areas to be the lynchpins in any consideration of digital literacies. Communication because digital technologies allow us to be connected and to communicate both locally and globally, via range of tools and media, as never before. Information because of the vast amounts of information that we can now create and/or find online; and we need a range of digital literacies to be able to access, evaluate, create and understand this digital information. Collaboration because digital technologies allow us to collaborate, to present ourselves, and to learn and work in distributed networks globally. And finally (re)design because since the rise of web 2.0 in the late 1990s, we have been able to produce or design our own digital content, redesign or remix the digital content of others, and to easily share that content across a wide variety of digital channels.

Our model of digital literacies was developed, particularly by Mark Pegrum, in the early 2010s, and the first edition of our book Digital Literacies was published in 2013. A lot has happened technology-wise since then. We have seen the development of new digital technologies and tools such as fitness trackers, or augmented and virtual reality apps and headsets. Each of these new tools allows us to do new things in our personal and professional lives, and they require new digital literacies. For example, understanding and applying the data provided by your fitness tracker requires a certain amount of data literacy. Using virtual and augmented reality requires spatial literacy. There is also an increasing amount of misinformation and disinformation being spread online, which we ourselves may unwittingly share or amplify via our...

Erscheint lt. Verlag 29.3.2021
Reihe/Serie narr STUDIENBÜCHER
Verlagsort Tübingen
Sprache englisch
Themenwelt Literatur Essays / Feuilleton
Schlagworte Digitale Bildung • Digitale Medien • Digitaler Englischunterricht • Digitaler Fremdsprachenunterricht • digitales Lehren und Lernen
ISBN-10 3-8233-0209-4 / 3823302094
ISBN-13 978-3-8233-0209-4 / 9783823302094
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