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The impact of computer-aided concept mapping on EFL learners’ lexical diversity: A process writing experiment ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2021-04-15 Mohammad Hassanzadeh, Elahe Saffari, Saeed Rezaei
Nowadays, many second/foreign language (L2) academic writing instruction programs place a high premium on pre-writing strategies. The current study examined the effect of software-supported concept mapping on lexical diversity (LD) of English learners’ argumentative essays within a process writing framework. Additionally, the relationship between the learners’ LD and their overall writing quality was
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Voluntary use of automated writing evaluation by content course students ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2021-03-31 Aysel Saricaoglu, Zeynep Bilki
Automated writing evaluation (AWE) technologies are common supplementary tools for helping students improve their language accuracy using automated feedback. In most existing studies, AWE has been implemented as a class activity or an assignment requirement in English or academic writing classes. The potential of AWE as a voluntary language learning tool is unknown. This study reports on the voluntary
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Designing speaking interaction in LMOOCs: An eTandem approach ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2021-03-10 Christine Appel, Joan-Tomàs Pujolà
Promoting speaking interaction remains a challenge for language massive open online courses (LMOOCs), both from a pedagogical and technological standpoint. This paper describes the design process of the tandemMOOC, which exploits the massive, open and online features of MOOCs in order to offer language learners online speaking interaction practice with native speakers of their target language. The
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The effect of content-related and external factors on student retention in LMOOCs ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2021-03-04 Kolbrún Friðriksdóttir
Commonly, low completion rates in massive open online courses have called into question the quality of their learning materials and instruction. This paper attempts to identify crucial factors of engagement and retention in language massive open online courses (LMOOCs) in the context of the open online program of Icelandic Online, a self-guided course for second language learners of Icelandic. The
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Narrative review and meta-analysis of MALL research on L2 skills ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-11-24 Hongying Peng, Sake Jager, Wander Lowie
This study employed a narrative review and a meta-analysis to synthesize the literature on mobile-assisted language learning (MALL). Following a systematic retrieval of literature from 2008 to 2017, 17 studies with 22 effect sizes were included based on predetermined inclusion and exclusion criteria. By categorizing the characteristics of the studies retrieved, the narrative review revealed a detailed
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Guerrilla fan translation, language learning, and metalinguistic discussion in a Catalan-speaking community of gamers ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-11-10 Boris Vazquez-Calvo
Driven by their affinity to popular culture, fans frequently engage in linguistic practices that may be conducive to language learning. This study seeks to find out how a group of Catalan-speaking gamers decided to start producing fan translations of video games from English into Catalan. Based on a digital ethnography (online interviews and observation of the group’s activity), two types of analysis
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Effects of mobile-supported task-based language teaching on EFL students’ linguistic achievement and conversational interaction ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-09-21 Wei-Chieh Fang, Hui-Chin Yeh, Bo-Ru Luo, Nian-Shing Chen
To address the challenges of limited language proficiency and provide necessary feedback in the implementation of task-based language teaching (TBLT), a mobile-supported TBLT application was developed to provide linguistic and task scaffolding. Sixty-six English as a foreign language (EFL) university learners participated in a three-week experiment as part of a general English course. They were assigned
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Effects of using machine translation to mediate the revision process of Korean university students’ academic writing ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-09-11 Sangmin-Michelle Lee, Neil Briggs
In recent years, marked gains in the accuracy of machine translation (MT) outputs have greatly increased its viability as a tool to support the efforts of English as a foreign language (EFL) students to write in English. This study examines error corrections made by 58 Korean university students by comparing their original L2 texts to that of MT outputs. Based on the results of the error analysis,
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Effect of SCMC on foreign language anxiety and learning experience: A comparison of voice, video, and VR-based oral interaction ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-06-29 James York, Koichi Shibata, Hayato Tokutake, Hiroshi Nakayama
Studies on computer-mediated communication often compare the affective affordances of different technologies with face-to-face communication. This study aimed to understand how three different computer-mediated communication modalities may affect EFL learners’ foreign language anxiety (FLA). Using a counterbalanced 3 by 3 factorial design, 30 undergraduate Japanese university students participated
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Narrow reading, vocabulary load and collocations in context: Exploring lexical repetition in concordances from a pedagogical perspective ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-06-15 Oliver James Ballance
Narrow reading has the potential to reduce vocabulary load and to provide rich opportunities for developing collocation knowledge, but these benefits rely on narrow reading increasing lexical repetition within a text. Hence, interest in narrow reading has been limited by the relatively small lexical effect of narrowing reading by topic (Nation, 2013). Nevertheless, research in data-driven learning
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Corpus literacy instruction in language teacher education: Investigating Arab EFL student teachers’ immediate beliefs and long-term practices ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-06-12 Muhammad M. M. Abdel Latif
With the increasing recognition of the pedagogical applications of corpus linguistics, there has been a growing interest in developing teachers’ corpus literacy to popularize the use of corpora in language education. This longitudinal study investigated Arab Gulf EFL student teachers’ immediate and long-term responses to corpus literacy instruction. After teaching a corpus literacy component to two
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Facebook or fail-book: Exploring “community” in a virtual community of practice ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-04-07 Ward Peeters, Marilize Pretorius
Creating collaborative working and learning experiences has long been at the forefront of computer-assisted language learning research. It is in this context that, in recent years, the integration of social networking sites and Web 2.0 in learning settings has surged, generating new opportunities to establish and explore virtual communities of practice (VCoPs). However, despite the number of studies
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The monolingual problem of computer-assisted language learning ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-03-20 Judith Buendgens-Kosten
This paper sets out to discuss the monolingual problem within computer-assisted language learning (CALL) research and CALL product development, namely a lack of knowledge about how CALL products and projects can support learners in using all their linguistic resources to achieve language-learning- and language-using-related goals, and a lack of CALL products and projects that realize this potential
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Effects of modality preference and working memory capacity on captioned videos in enhancing L2 listening outcomes ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-02-14 Emily Fen Kam, Yeu-Ting Liu, Wen-Ta Tseng
Captioned video is widely used to enhance second language (L2) learners’ exposure to oral input beyond the classroom setting, and captioning has been found to provide an instantaneous, useful visual aid for parsing and understanding L2 oral discourse. Nevertheless, a meta-analysis has shown that captioning exerts a selective effect on L2 learners with different profiles. This study investigated whether
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Mobile-mediated dynamic assessment: A new perspective for second language development ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2020-01-16 Alberto Andujar
The present investigation analyses the potential of a pedagogical dynamic assessment (DA) approach to foster second language (L2) development through the use of a mobile instant messaging application. Students’ zone of actual and proximal development is observed through the use of a grammar and vocabulary level test and the use of the WhatsApp application respectively. Sixty students taking a B1 English
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Implementing digital game-enhanced pedagogy: Supportive and impeding language awareness and discourse participation phenomena ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-10-03 Levi McNeil
This descriptive study investigated the implementation of student-selected, entertainment-purposed digital games for foreign language teaching and learning. During a 15-week semester, 16 Korean EFL students enrolled in an introductory educational technology course played online games, visited gaming sites, and completed instructional tasks. Conceptualizing games as social practices and drawing from
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Informal digital learning of English and strategic competence for cross-cultural communication: Perception of varieties of English as a mediator ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-09-12 Ju Seong Lee
This exploratory study examined the potential connections between informal digital learning of English (IDLE), strategic competence for cross-cultural communication and perception of varieties of English. A total of 266 Korean EFL university students, who had no overseas experience, filled in a questionnaire survey. Follow-up semi-structured interviews were also carried out to complement the quantitative
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“If you don’t improve, what’s the point?” Investigating the impact of a “flipped” online exchange in teacher education ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-07-25 Melinda Dooly, Randall Sadler
This article presents a pedagogical design for teacher education that combines flipped materials, in-class instruction, and telecollaboration (also known as virtual exchange) for foreign language teacher education. The context of this study is a course on technology and language learning for future teachers in which the flipped classroom concept was applied to technology-infused collaborative teacher
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Her Story or their own stories? Digital game-based learning, student creativity, and creative writing ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-06-19 Sangmin-Michelle Lee
This qualitative study investigates a media transfer project in which a digital game was used to promote student creativity in an English as a foreign language (EFL) class. The paper first addresses the potential of opportunities for stimulating student creativity and motivation. Creativity has been highlighted as a core competency and has garnered considerable interest in many fields in recent years;
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A self-tracking study of international students in France: Exploring opportunities for language and cultural learning ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-06-19 Nicolas Guichon
This exploratory study focuses on international students’ usage of digital tools in order to understand what role such tools play in the transition to their new academic environments and what learning opportunities they provide. Not only do digital tools accompany international students’ social, cultural, and linguistic transitions as they move to France to further their language competence, but their
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Learner autonomy versus guided reflection: How different methodologies affect intercultural development in online intercultural exchange ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-06-19 Simeon Flowers, Brent Kelsen, Bob Cvitkovic
This paper presents the results of a study exploring the intercultural development of first-year Japanese university students engaged in online intercultural exchange (OIE) using two variations: one implementing guided reflection, and the other relying on the learner autonomy model. Intercultural development was quantitatively measured using the Intercultural Sensitivity Scale (Chen & Starosta, 2000
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Mobile-assisted language learning: A Duolingo case study ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2019-05-28 Shawn Loewen, Dustin Crowther, Daniel R. Isbell, Kathy Minhye Kim, Jeffrey Maloney, Zachary F. Miller, Hima Rawal
The growing availability of mobile technologies has contributed to an increase in mobile-assisted language learning in which learners can autonomously study a second language (L2) anytime or anywhere (e.g. Kukulska-Hulme, Lee & Norris, 2017; Reinders & Benson, 2017). Research investigating the effectiveness of such study for L2 learning, however, has been limited, especially regarding large-scale commercial
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Developing oral communication in Spanish lower-level courses: The case of voice recording and videoconferencing activities ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-10-31 Marta Tecedor, Gonzalo Campos-Dintrans
This study adds to the literature on computer-mediated communication (CMC) by examining the impact of online voice recording (VR) activities and peer-to-peer videoconferencing (VC) conversations on the development of beginning Spanish learners’ speaking performance. Specifically, this paper explores (1) whether VR and VC activities promote oral proficiency, and if so, whether those gains can be seen
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Podcast-based pronunciation training: Enhancing FL learners’ perception and production of fossilised segmental features ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-10-04 Jonás Fouz-González
This study investigates the potential of a podcast-based approach aimed at helping foreign language learners improve their pronunciation of features that tend to be fossilised in their interlanguage. Training took place over a period of three weeks in which podcasts were used for perceptual and productive practice as well as for peer evaluation. Participants in this study ( N =47) were randomly assigned
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The role of online dictionary advertisements in language reception, production, and retention ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-09-20 Anna Dziemianko
Today, people want to consult dictionaries of good quality, but they expect them to be available online for free. For this reason, publishers need advertisements to cover the costs of producing and maintaining online dictionary content. This paper aims to investigate the role of advertisements in language reception, production, and learning following online dictionary consultation. It also undertakes
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Videoconferencing and the networked provision of language programs in regional and rural schools ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-09-17 Yvette Slaughter, Wally Smith, John Hajek
The use of videoconferencing technology to support the delivery of language programs shows great potential in regional and rural settings where a lack of access to specialist teachers limits equitable access to education. In this article, we investigate the establishment of two regional and rural primary school networks in Australia for videoconferenced language learning. Adopting a perspective taken
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Critically examining the use of blog-based fanfiction in the advanced language classroom ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-09-13 Shannon Sauro, Björn Sundmark
This paper critically examines the integration of online fanfiction practices into an advanced university English language classroom. The fanfiction project, The Blogging Hobbit, was carried out as part of a course in the teacher education program at a Swedish university for students who were specializing in teaching English at the secondary school level. Participants were 122 students who completed
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A mixed-methods study of tailor-made animated cartoons in teaching punctuation in EFL writing ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-09-12 Arif Bakla
Despite their potential benefits, teacher-created animated cartoons have not found much room in second-language (L2) research, probably due to some technical challenges involved in creating them. This paper reports the findings of a mixed-methods embedded experimental study, designed to test the impact of tailor-made animated cartoons on the correct use of common punctuation rules in English. The participants
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Advancing CALL research via data-mining techniques: Unearthing hidden groups of learners in a corpus-based L2 vocabulary learning experiment ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-09-11 Hansol Lee, Mark Warschauer, Jang Ho Lee
In this study, we used a data-mining approach to identify hidden groups in a corpus-based second-language (L2) vocabulary experiment. After a vocabulary pre-test, a total of 132 participants performed three online reading tasks (in random orders) equipped with the following glossary types: (1) concordance lines and definitions of target lexical items, (2) concordance lines of target lexical items,
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Second language learning in the context of massively multiplayer online games: A scoping review ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-09-11 Nasser Jabbari, Zohreh R. Eslami
This review examines the second language acquisition (SLA) literature with regard to the role of “massively multiplayer online games” (MMOGs) in second language (L2) learning. It focuses on commercially developed off-the-shelf (COTS) MMOGs only (some of them modified for educational purposes such as Reinders’ & Wattana’s work). It surveys the current empirical research to find out which aspects of
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Beyond elocution: Multimodal narrative discourse analysis of L2 storytelling ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-08-30 Mei-Ya Liang
Drawing upon research on narrative and speech styles and on digital and multimodal communication, the author proposes multimodal narrative discourse analysis (MNDA) with associated pedagogical and analytical procedures to teach and study storytelling. The second language (L2) students first participated in multimodal narrative simulations in the virtual world of Second Life. The university students
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Developing a writing assistant to help EAP writers with collocations in real time ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-08-10 Ana Frankenberg-Garcia, Robert Lew, Jonathan C. Roberts, Geraint Paul Rees, Nirwan Sharma
Corpora have given rise to a wide range of lexicographic resources aimed at helping novice users of academic English with their writing. This includes academic vocabulary lists, a variety of textbooks, and even a bespoke academic English dictionary. However, writers may not be familiar with these resources or may not be sufficiently aware of the lexical shortcomings of their emerging texts to trigger
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Interaction in a discussion list: An exploration of cognitive, social, and teaching presence in teachers’ online collaborations ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-05-23 Fatemeh Nami, S. Susan Marandi, Elaheh Sotoudehnama
Discussion lists have gained a significant popularity in professional development research over the past few decades for the opportunity they provide for asynchronous interaction. This article presents findings from a small-scale case study that aimed at exploring the nature of teachers’ asynchronous exchanges in a discussion list. The data comprised the archived log of the messages in a Yahoo Group
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Orientations to negotiated language and task rules in online L2 interaction ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-02-02 Olcay Sert, Ufuk Balaman
Recent research shows that negotiation of meaning in online task-oriented interactions can be a catalyst for L2 (second/foreign/additional language) development. However, how learners undertake suc ...
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Computer-assisted learning of communication (CALC): A case study of Japanese learning in a 3D virtual world ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-01-29 Kasumi Yamazaki
This study investigates an instantiation of a 3D virtual world–based Japanese learning curriculum within the context of a Japanese as a foreign language (JFL) classroom. Through a mixed-method case study approach, participants’ natural acquisition of Japanese in a 3D virtual environment was examined. In the present study, four sources of data from 11 university-level JFL students ( n =11) were collected
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Virtual world anonymity and foreign language oral interaction ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-01-25 Sabela Melchor-Couto
In recent years, a considerably high number of research studies have looked into the use of virtual worlds (VWs) for language learning. A number of authors have hypothesised about the effects of anonymity when foreign language interactions are conducted via VWs. This study addresses the effect that the anonymity experienced in VW interaction may have on participants that present different affective
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Managing multimodal data in virtual world research for language learning ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-01-24 Cristina Palomeque, Joan-Tomàs Pujolà
The study of multimodality in communication has attracted the attention of researchers studying online multimodal environments such as virtual worlds. Specifically, 3D virtual worlds have especially attracted the interest of educators and academics due to the multiplicity of verbal channels, which are often comprised of text and voice channels, as well as their 3D graphical interface, allowing for
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Innovative assessment of aviation English in a virtual world: Windows into cognitive and metacognitive strategies ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-01-24 Moonyoung Park
Aviation English proficiency is a core competency in the global air traffic controller profession. There is, however, growing concern about the current ineffective paper-based assessment methods and the severe lack of interactive online testing for such a critical profession, one that should be ideally assessed in an authentic task and situation (Alderson, 2010 ; Douglas, 2013 ). The tests, which lack
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Investigating research approaches: Classroom-based interaction studies in physical and virtual contexts ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-01-14 Peggy Hartwick
This article investigates research approaches used in traditional classroom-based interaction studies for identifying a suitable research method for studies in three-dimensional virtual learning environments (3DVLEs). As opportunities for language learning and teaching in virtual worlds emerge, so too do new research questions. An understanding of research design benefits and limitations is timely
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Effectiveness of computer-assisted argument mapping for comprehension, recall, and retention ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2018-01-14 Maryam Eftekhari, Elaheh Sotoudehnama
Compared to traditional pen-and-paper presentation of information, computer-assisted argument mapping seems to be more efficient in developing lower order thinking skills such as memory and comprehension. The present study investigated the impact of argument map construction and reading via computer versus pen and paper on English as a foreign language (EFL) majors’ comprehension, recall, and retention
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Multimedia listening comprehension: Metacognitive instruction or metacognitive instruction through dialogic interaction ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-12-11 Hossein Bozorgian, Ebrahim Fakhri Alamdari
This study is an attempt to investigate the effect of metacognitive instruction through dialogic interaction in a joint activity on advanced Iranian English as a foreign language (EFL) learners’ multimedia listening and their metacognitive awareness in listening comprehension. The data were collected through ( N =180) male and female Iranian advanced learners ranging from 16 to 24 years of age in three
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The role of telecollaboration in language and intercultural learning: A synthesis of studies published between 2010 and 2015 ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-11-27 Emrullah Yasin Çiftçi, Perihan Savaş
In today’s globalized world, learning languages and developing intercultural skills are of paramount importance due to dynamic and complex global interdependencies. However, not every language student around the world has a chance to engage in face-to-face intercultural communication with people from different backgrounds. Telecollaboration offers a worthwhile opportunity by creating digital environments
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Transparency of reporting in CALL meta-analyses between 2003 and 2015 ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-10-11 Huifen Lin, Tsuiping Chen, Hsien-Chin Liou
Since its introduction by Glass in the 1970s, meta-analysis has become a widely accepted and the most preferred approach to conducting research synthesis. Overcoming the weaknesses commonly associated with traditional narrative review and vote counting, meta-analysis is a statistical method of systematically aggregating and analyzing empirical studies by following well-established procedures. The findings
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Effects of videoconference-embedded classrooms (VEC) on learners’ perceptions toward English as an international language (EIL) ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-10-02 Ju Seong Lee, Yuji Nakamura, Randall Sadler
Despite the accumulated body of research on teaching English as an international language (EIL), few have offered a detailed overview of how to implement an EIL classroom, and still fewer empirical studies have been conducted. Twenty-one university students at a Japanese university participated in the study in the spring semester of 2015. The videoconference-embedded classroom (VEC) as an instructional
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Unlearning overgenerated be through data-driven learning in the secondary EFL classroom ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-09-20 Soyeon Moon, Sun-Young Oh
This paper reports on the cognitive and affective benefits of data-driven learning (DDL), in which Korean EFL learners at the secondary level notice and unlearn their “overgenerated be ” by comparing native English-speaker and learner corpora with guided induction. To select the target language item and compile learner-corpus-based materials, writing samples of 285 learners were collected. The participants
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CALL from an ecological perspective: How a teacher perceives affordance and fosters learner agency in a technology-mediated language classroom ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-09-08 Qian Liu, Chin-Chi Chao
The possibility of exploiting technology for more robust and meaningful learning and teaching has invoked messianic responses from the language education community. Yet to be explored are teachers’ pedagogical choices based on the perceived technological affordances as well as interactions between teacher and student agency mediated by these affordances in the ecology of a classroom. This qualitative
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Professional development in the transition to online teaching: The voice of entrant online instructors ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-07-20 Müge Adnan
Professional development (PD) is critical for instructors who are adopting new roles and competencies in online teaching environments. This mixed-method study examines an online faculty development programme in Turkey, reflecting upon participants’ expectations, readiness and satisfaction. The findings indicate a significant relationship between individual readiness and satisfaction, and reveal that
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Effects of gloss type on text recall and incidental vocabulary learning in mobile-assisted L2 listening ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-07-17 Fidel Çakmak, Gülcan Erçetin
This study investigates the effects of multimedia glosses on text recall and incidental vocabulary learning in a mobile-assisted L2 listening task. A total of 88 participants with a low level of proficiency in English were randomly assigned to one of four conditions that involved single channel (textual-only, pictorial-only) and dual-channel (textual-plus-pictorial) glosses as well as a control condition
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Triumph through texting: Restoring learners’ interest in grammar ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-06-29 Mona Hedjazi Moghari, S. Susan Marandi
It is usually the case that learners of English as a foreign language (EFL) are exposed to language materials in class only, and of course in such a short space of time, they do not always find enough chance to practice English grammar features and become aware of their grammar mistakes. As a potential solution to this problem, the current study inspects the impact of using cell phones, specifically
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Dictionary form in decoding, encoding and retention: Further insights ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-06-06 Anna Dziemianko
The aim of the paper is to investigate the role of dictionary form (paper versus electronic) in language reception, production and retention. The body of existing research does not give a clear answer as to which dictionary medium benefits users more. Divergent findings from many studies into the topic might stem from differences in research methodology (including the various tasks, participants and
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Providing graduated corrective feedback in an intelligent computer-assisted language learning environment ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-05-24 Haiyang Ai
Corrective feedback (CF), a response to linguistic errors made by second language (L2) learners, has received extensive scholarly attention in second language acquisition. While much of the previous research in the field has focused on whether CF facilitates or impedes L2 development, few studies have examined the efficacy of gradually modifying the explicitness or specificity of CF as a function of
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A framework for learner agency in online spoken interaction tasks ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-05-22 Janine Knight, Elena Barbera, Christine Appel
Learner agency, the capability of individual human beings to make choices and act on these choices in a way that makes a difference in their lives (Martin, 2004), is instrumental in second language learning because attainment is only arrived at by learner choice (Pavlenko & Lantolf, 2000). If attainment is understood as learner engagement in synchronous, collaborative, spoken interaction which is thought
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Partial and synchronized captioning: A new tool to assist learners in developing second language listening skill ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-03-02 Maryam Sadat Mirzaei, Kourosh Meshgi, Yuya Akita, Tatsuya Kawahara
This paper introduces a novel captioning method, partial and synchronized captioning (PSC), as a tool for developing second language (L2) listening skills. Unlike conventional full captioning, which provides the full text and allows comprehension of the material merely by reading, PSC promotes listening to the speech by presenting a selected subset of words, where each word is synched to its corresponding
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Eyetracking methodology in SCMC: A tool for empowering learning and teaching ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-02-23 Ursula Stickler, Lijing Shi
Computer-assisted language learning, or CALL, is an interdisciplinary area of research, positioned in tension between science and social science, computing and education, linguistics and applied linguistics. This paper argues that by appropriating methods originating in some areas of CALL-related research, for example, HCI or psycho-linguistics, the agenda of 'attention-focus' research can be shifted
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Effect of modality and task type on interlanguage variation ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-02-09 Hye Yeong Kim
An essential component for assessing the accuracy and fluency of language learners is understanding how mode of communication and task type affect performance in second-language (L2) acquisition. This study investigates how text-based synchronous computer-mediated communication (SCMC) and face-to-face (F2F) oral interaction can influence the performance of language learners in producing grammatical
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Evaluating online bilingual dictionaries: The case of popular free English-Polish dictionaries ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2017-02-06 Robert Lew, Agnieszka Szarowska
Language learners today exhibit a strong preference for free online resources. One problem with such resources is that their quality can vary dramatically. Building on related work on monolingual resources for English, we propose an evaluation framework for online bilingual dictionaries, designed to assess lexicographic quality in four major areas: coverage of lexical items, their treatment in the
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Facilitating second language learners’ listening comprehension with Second Life and Skype ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2016-12-20 Natasha Levak, Jeong-Bae Son
Learning how to comprehend while listening to a second language is often considered by learners to be a difficult process that can lead to anxiety when trying to communicate (Graham, 2006; Graham & Macaro, 2008). Computer-mediated communication (CMC) can be used to assist in increasing access to native speakers and opportunities to listen. This study investigates the effectiveness of the use of Second
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Foreign language anxiety levels in Second Life oral interaction ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2016-10-27 Sabela Melchor-Couto
Virtual worlds have been described as low anxiety environments (Dickey, 2005), where students may feel “shielded” behind their avatars (Rosell-Aguilar, 2005: 432). The aim of this article is to analyse the evolution of the Foreign Language Anxiety (FLA) levels experienced by a group of participants who used the virtual world Second Life for oral interaction (VW Group). The data gathered was compared
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Exploring collaborative reverse subtitling for the enhancement of written production activities in English as a second language ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2016-10-19 Noa Talaván, Ana Ibáñez, Elena Bárcena
This article explores the effects of collaborative reverse subtitling as an activity for the promotion of writing skills in English as a second language. An initial analysis is undertaken of the pros and cons of the role of translation in second language learning historically and the role of information and communication technology in this process, with special attention being paid to recent initiatives
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Developing oral proficiency with VoiceThread: Learners’ strategic uses and views ReCALL (IF 1.842) Pub Date : 2016-09-13 Vera A. Dugartsyrenova, Veronica G. Sardegna
This study explored Russian as a foreign language (RFL) learners’ self-reported strategic uses of VoiceThread (VT)—a multimodal asynchronous computer-mediated communication tool—in order to gain insights into learner perceived effectiveness of VT for second language (L2) oral skills development and to determine the factors that contributed to those perceptions. The participants were eight undergraduate
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