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Titolo della riunione

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speaking and pronunciation, exam strategies and practice. Organization of the blend ... Listening e speaking, lexical items, use of language forms and pronunciation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Titolo della riunione


1
A tri-blend for Lifelong LearningCertification
of Business English at the University of Siena,
Italy
Centro Linguistico di Ateneo University of
Siena, Italy
BESIG Berlin Linda Mesh

November 2007

2
Business English BEC
  • Business English is now considered a job skill
  • ? including both communicative and intercultural
    skills
  • The Language Centre is involved in two very
    different blended learning projects
  • Employees of a large bank
  • More than 300 participants in groups of 15-18
  • Older adult learners, mature
  • Experience working with streams of messages and
    social networks
  • Many have had a pause/gap from study of English
  • First-year students in the Faculty of Economics
  • More than 150 students in groups of 25-30
  • Young adults Internet culture
  • Low attention span - experience surfing the net,
    messaging, gaming
  • Need to learn how to learn online

3
Breakdown of ability levels Italian context
  • Courses for bank employees
  • Maximum level offered is COE C1, Cambridge BEC
    Higher, in
  • 9 progressive language levels
  • More than 300 participants
  • Working full-time so they have very little time
    for study
  • The majority of participants complete entrance
    testing in the lower levels COE B1 and under.
  • University undergraduates in Economics
  • Maximum certification level required at the
    University of Siena is COE level B1, BEC
    Preliminary
  • First semester 2007-08, more than 350
    undergraduate students completed the entrance
    testing with results at BEC preliminary and below.

4
Blended BEC in a range of nine
language levels
5
Organization of the blend
  • Integrates the three elements of f2f, online
    learning and self-access lab resources
  • Face-to-face lessons
  • Focus on interaction through speaking and
    listening,
  • presenting lexical items, language forms and
    pronunciation
  • Online lessons
  • Focus on interaction through writing and reading,
    forum activities, wiki, blogs and instant
    messaging which are all text types that Liam
    Brown earlier described as being almost pure
    orality
  • Focus on the development of interpersonal skills,
    through task-oriented active peer learning,
  • Self-access laboratory complementary resources
  • Special emphasis is on the development of
    listening skills,
  • speaking and pronunciation,
  • exam strategies and practice.

6
Flexible learning to meet a variety of learning
styles and needs
7
Innovative course design using new
technologies a blended solution
  • Interaction - Three types of online interaction
    for active learning and discourse construction
  • Learner ? content interaction
  • Learner ? instructor interaction
  • Learner ? learner interaction
  • Active learning and the Internet learners do
    something with the information rather than being
    passive recipients
  • Individualisation the teacher provides a
    variety of learning paths for individual needs
    and approaches to the learning process

8
The nature of adult learners
  • What affects their success?
  • While children trust the teacher to define course
    content, adults need to define it for themselves,
    or at least to be persuaded that it is relevant
    to their needs.
  • While children accept a dependent relationship
    with a teacher, adults have a sense of
    self-direction and personal responsibility.
  • Adults have a wide range of personal experiences
    to draw on, which they appreciate being used as a
    learning resource, and resent being ignored in
    favour of other peoples experiences.
  • For adults the future is now they have a basis
    of information and see learning as necessary for
    solving problems in the present.
  • Children may need external motivation to make
    them learn adults volunteer to learn because of
    their intrinsic motivation.
  • Knowles theory of andragogy, 1978

9
Learner attitudes and learner support
  • Adults experience anxiety about learning, about
    the ability to meet expectations, both external
    and self-expectations. Otherwise known as the
    fear of failure.
  • Inexperienced learners may have a high degree of
    anxiety when using new technologies, which may
    become apparent when they have to turn in the
    first written assignment or forum message.
  • Support strategies
  • Risk-taking should be approved
  • The workload and goals of the course should be
    realistic
  • Adults who learn enjoy learning
  • adults who enjoy learning learn.
  • Enjoyment is a sign of high motivation.

10
Advantages of online interaction
  • The concept of willingness to communicate was
    developed from research on individual differences
    in SLA. (MacIntyre, Clément, Dörnyei, Noels,
    1998)
  • Social, psychological and situational factors
    seem to enter into willingness to communicate.
  • Situation specific anxiety and lack of
    self-confidence diminishes opportunities for
    participating in beneficial interaction.
    (Compton, 2002)
  • Asynchronous forum discussion activities may
    provide opportunities for discourse development
    in L2 and also increase willingness to
    communicate in normally timid students, due to
    the relatively anonymous feeling of online
    identity and the extended time available for
    expressing ideas.

11
Collaborative teaching
the course team
  • Learner support is provided by
  • classroom teacher
  • online teacher - individualized support for
    students with special needs
  • Lab councellor

12
Collaborative discourse production
  • The classroom is integrated with online task
    based learning for increased discourse
    production
  • The online teacher provides models of the target
    language presented
  • dual modes provide greater opportunities for
    language production in various forms speaking /
    writing
  • students use a wide variety of discourse
    structures in electronic discussions and may take
    a more active role in discourse management than
    in the classroom (Chun)
  • learners have a choice as to who they seek out
    for help, matching learning styles with teaching
    styles
  • socio-cultural aspects of collaborative language
    learning facilitate increased progress and
    encourage the development of autonomous learning
    habits

13
  • Present a clear integration between the
    face-to-face and online lessons emphasizing the
    objectives of each element.

14
Structure
  • Course Calendar, 60 hours per level
  • 16 classroom lessons 32 hours
  • Listening e speaking, lexical items, use of
    language forms and pronunciation
  • 2 online modules, composed of 10 units 20 hours
  • Reading comprehension e writing
  • We recommend a minimum of 1 hour of study time
    per week to complete the online activities
  • Focus on learner-learner, learner-teacher
    interaction
  • Indirect development of an oral-based discourse
    culture through online collaborative textual
    interaction
  • 4 lessons in the self-access lab 8 hours

15
A lesson map with progress check
I can statements
16
Seven-month calendar
  • Breve esposizione dei risultati in funzione degli
    obiettivi

17
Timeline
  • Objectives attain BEC skill levels
  • Results improved interpersonal and
    self-management skills

18
Language Centre BEC webpage
19
The Faculty of Economics
pre-intermediate level
20
Learning environment Moodle
21
Home page BEC-B, Faculty of Economics
22
Forum Wiki
  • Forum - focus on active learning
  • interpersonal communication
  • CMC forum activity designed to produce meaningful
    interaction
  • authentic online reading resources in context
  • Asynchronous communication allows time for
    reflection
  • students are more ambitious in L2 discourse
    production
  • timid students are more likely to participate
  • authentic peer audience increases motivation and
    improves quality of writing
  • Corrections and feedback on the final activity
    are given after all interaction and final texts
    have been completed
  • Wiki focus on form through
  • collaborative peer correction
  • teacher collects common errors from contributions
    and lists them in a wiki
  • clear instructions are given for the peer
    correction activity
  • students collaborate on drawing up a list of
    corrections
  • teacher monitors activity, gives final feedback
    and verifies corrections where necessary

23
Forum CMC activity instructions
24
Wiki for Collaborative Peer Correction the
tutor inserts a list of errors and an example
correction
25
Students edit wiki by inserting corrections
26
Tutor gives final feedback on students
corrections
27
Tutor can monitor wiki versions
throughout the activity
28
Student feedback online activities
Create an online discourse culture
29
References
  • Chun, D.M., (1994), Using computer networking to
    facilitate the acquisition of interactive
    competence, System, 22 (1), pp. 17-31.
  • Compton, L. (2004) From Chatting to Oral
    Fluency Using chat to improve self-confidence
    and increase willingness to communicate, IATEFL
    Poland, Teaching English with Technology, ISSN
    1642-1027, Vol. 4 (1), January, 2004. Available
    from http//www.iatefl.org.pl/call/j_soft16.htmc
    ompton
  • Hughes, J., (2000) The Learning Organisation,
    Part 1, CLMS Working Paper 29, University of
    Leicester. December. Available from
    http//www.clms.le.ac.uk/publications/workingpaper
    s/working_paper29.pdf
  • Knowles, M., (1978) The Adult Learner, Gulf
    Publishing, Houston, TX, 1978.
  • MacIntyre, P. D., Clément, R., Dörnyei, Z.,
    Noels, K. A. (1998). Conceptualizing willingness
    to communicate in a L2 a situational model of L2
    confidence and affiliation, Modern Language
    Journal, 82, pp. 545-562.
  • Mesh, L., Zanca, C., (2005) WebLingu_at_ blended
    English language learning, Journal of e-Learning
    and Knowledge Society, Edizioni Erickson, Vol. 1
    (2), July, pp. 259-270.
  • Pica, T., (1996) Second language learning
    through interaction Multiple perspectives.
    Working Papers in Educational Linguistics, vol.
    12 (2), pp. 1-22.
  • Links
  • CLA Siena Online http//moodle.lett.unisi.it/
  • Moodle http//moodle.org/
  • e-mail mesh_at_unisi.it
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