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Critical success factors in a TRIDEM exchange

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Title: Critical success factors in a TRIDEM exchange


1
Critical success factors in a TRIDEM exchange
  • Mirjam Hauck, Department of Languages,
  • The Open University/UK

2
Outline
  • Telecollaboration
  • The Tridem project participants, tools,
    structure of the exchange
  • Main challenges
  • Discussion of findings
  • Post project risk assessment after ODowd and
    Ritter (2006)
  • Conclusions

3
Definition
  • The use of online communication tools to
    bring together language learners in different
    countries for the development of collaborative
    project work and intercultural exchange.
  • ODowd and Ritter (2006)

4
Synchronous online language learning
  • The following are interdependent
  • Learners readiness to take risks and tutors
    readiness to take a hands-off approach.
  • Participant awareness and acceptance of the
    differences between f2f and online language
    learning environments.
  • Successful online communication depends on the
    participants familiarity with the available
    tools and their affordances and on their ability
    to cope with the simultaneity of several meaning
    making processes.
  • Hampel, Felix, Hauck and Coleman, 2005

5
Synchronous online language learning
  • Tolerance of ambiguity and locus of control
    have a direct influence on the learners ability
    to assume responsibility for the shared control
    over learning offered in equalizing online
    environments.
  • Communication opportunities offered by
    audio-graphic conferencing need to be optimally
    exploited through appropriate task design.
  • Hampel, Felix, Hauck and Coleman, 2005

6
The Tridem project participants
  • 5 advanced adult learners of French
  • The Open University (UK)
  • 10 campus based 2nd year students of French,
    Carnegie Mellon University (USA)
  • 10 French native speakers enrolled in a MA
    programme for distance education,
  • Université de Franche Comté (France)
  • A team of tutors/researchers (three native
    speakers and four non-native speakers of French)

7
The Tridem project tools
  • The Open Universitys online tuition environment
  • multiple synchronous audio channels
  • synchronous text chat
  • several shared graphic interfaces
  • 10 password-protected blogs (www.blogger.com)

8
The Tridem project structure of the exchange
  • 10 weeks
  • warm-up period
  • main phase weeks 3-9
  • collaborative tasks (blog activities)
  • several formal and informal synchronous sessions
    (virtual coffee house/pub)
  • final week evaluation

9
Methodological approach I
  • Research objectives
  • The affordances of synchronous and asynchronous
    multimodal environments and their impact on
  • learner experience and interaction
  • the development of intercultural communicative
    competence

10
Methodological approach II
  • A comprehensive body of data through
  • pre- and post-treatment questionnaires
  • post-treatment semi-structured interviews
  • audio recordings (Lyceum)
  • log files (Lyceum blogs)
  • student production (Lyceum blogs)

11
Findings linguistic competence

12
Findings linguistic competence
13
Findings linguistic competence
  • Son intervention est très neutre et distante
    comme si elle publiait un message par obligation.

14
Findings affective factors
  • Features of successful language learning
  • enthusiasm motivation (rank 1)
  • willingness to communicate (rank 2)
  • ability to assess ones own strengths and
    weaknesses (rank 3)
  • However
  • Participants manifested very different language
    anxiety profiles
  • Half of the participants (n25) didnt feel they
    had become part of an online community

15
Findings affective factors
  • Lack of body language
  • While participants in online language
    learning may experience a loss of embodiment,
    this is at times perceived as an advantage as
    it allows learners to remain incognito and to
    speak more freely.
  • (Hauck and Hurd 2005)
  • Ne pas voir la personne en face de moi est
    quelque chose dexcitant. Je pose des questions
    que je ne poserais pas si je voyais et si je
    connaissais la personne. Cela permet de découvrir
    la personne sans avoir da priori.

16
Findings learning environment
  • Contextual knowledge
  • Awareness of the learning environment
  • Support in achieving such awareness
  • Choice of tools
  • very important or essential when learning a
    language online
  • Multimodal communicative competence
  • The ability to understand the combined
    potential of various modes for making meaning.
  • (Royce 2000)

17
Findings learning environment
18
Findings learning environment
19
Findings learning environment
20
Findings cultural learning
  • Hidden cultural learning
  • We didnt speak so deeply about each others
    culture, but I was able to learn a lot about my
    partner as a person. She likes to ballroom dance,
    particularly the tango, she enjoys learning many
    languages, and she also has a drive to help
    support breast cancer awareness. These are all
    attributes that are very similar to me. Through
    this, I realized that even though were from
    different countries, we still have so much in
    common and share many interests. And this was a
    comforting feeling.
  • US participant

21
Findings cultural learning
  • Changed view of partners culture
  • I did not fully understand the reasons why
    immigrant ghettos had arisen in France until my
    partner explained the background. I had no idea
    that my Moroccan partner would have found
    inspiration in a book written by Martin Gray
    about the tragic loss of his family during and
    after the second world war - I now have this book
    and look forward to learning where she found her
    inspiration and to sharing it.
  • UK participant

22
Post-treatment risk assessment after ODowd and
Ritter (2006)
23
Post-treatment risk assessment after ODowd and
Ritter (2006)
24
Conclusions
  • Unpredictable dynamic nature of
    telecollaborative exchanges risk of partial
    interaction failure
  • Positive or negative outcomes depend on a variety
    of interrelated factors
  • Possibility to gauge degree of risk
  • Areas of conflict misunderstanding can be
    turned into key moments of cultural learning
    depending on
  • participants level of multimodal communicative
    competence
  • their ability to make efficient use of the
    available meaning making resources

25
Conclusions
  • Increasing convergence of technologies
  • New cognitive and affective demands on tutors
    learners
  • Success or failure still operable concepts in
    the context of telecollaboration?
  • Complexity of the factors suggests that
  • both tutors and researchers need to develop a
    more differentiated understanding of what terms
    such as online intercultural communication and
    electronic literacy actually involve. (ODowd
    and Ritter 2006)
  • learners need to approach telecollaborative
    exchanges with a good understanding of the
    conventions used and of the cultural dynamics at
    work. (Godwin Jones 2003)

26
THANK YOU!
  • I think the great potential of TRIDEM could be
    that each programme, or learning team, can create
    its own culture.
  • UK participant
  • Critical success factors in a TRIDEM exchange
  • ReCALL 19(2)
  • m.hauck_at_open.ac.uk
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