Title: CALL PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
1CALL PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
2General review of past studies on CALL history ?
too factual, lack of in-depth analysis
Bax own study An alternative categorization of
CALL history
Reassessment of Warschauer and Healeys study
Restricted CALL Open CALL Integrated CALL
Two fallacies The Omnipotence The Sole Agent
A concept of future CALL Normalization
Conclusion An agenda for future CALL
3Part I Reassessing the history of CALL
- Three questions need to be addressed in the
article - Where has CALL been?
- Where is it now?
- Where is it going?
4- The future must learn from the past and
present. - ? the necessity of reassessing the history of
CALL, and its present situation as well.
5- Literature review of previous study research of
CALL history - Delcloque (2000)
6- Bax conclusion of current study on CALL history
- Ahmad et al.(1985) ? many acronyms but little
analysis - CALICO study (Sanders, 1995) ? relates only to
North America and is weighed towards facts
rather than analysis - Levy (2000) / Chappele (2001) ? only a review,
rather than an in-depth discussion - Other reviews of history of CALL ? for the most
part of the review type, insufficient in
critical analysis
7- By comparison
- Warschauer and Healeys (1998, 2000)
- ? the only substantive, systematic analysis to
understand CALL history, more than factual
terms. - ? the best available analysis of CALL history
- ? as a starting point to revisit the history of
CALL.
8Part II An evaluation on Warschauer and
Healeys study of CALL history
- Three phases proposed by Warschauer and Healey
- ? Structural (previously Behaviouristic)
- ? Communicative
- ? Integrative
- (Table P15)
9- Weaknesses in Warschauer and Healeys research
- - Inconsistencies in chronology significant
differences in chronology for the same phases in
different publications - - Ambiguous disclaimers of the historical
validity of the phases - - Unclear criteria in defining Communicative
CALL phase - ? implausible examples and definitions for CLT,
unclear criteria of definition the wishes of its
proponents / the software / the use of software
in class
10- - Doubtful assertion of integrative CALL
- 1. If defined on the basis of approach to
language teaching - ? indistinguishable from mainstream CLT
- 2. If defined on the basis of the use of
computers in the syllabus or in classroom
practice - ? there was no actual change at all
- 3. If defined as a new hope or ambition for CALL
- ? some validity in the category, but hardly a
sufficient criterion for suggesting the emergence
of a new historical phase of CALL
11- Conclusion of evaluation
- ? call for a new analysis less confusing
terminology, better fit with historical
progression of CALL software, approach and
practice.
12Part III An Alternative analysis of CALL
proposed by Bax
- Criteria of categorization
- general approaches instead of phases
- Categorization
- Restricted CALL (1960s - 1980),
- Open CALL (1980s - today),
- Integrated CALL (existing in a few places and a
few dimensions only. key difference to
Integrative CALL does not exist to any
significant degree, but represents instead an aim
towards which we should be working.)
13- Explanation of Validity
- ?Three approaches coincide with general
historical periods. - ? Other benefits
- 1. The terminology prevents conceptual confusion
with behaviourist or communicative approaches
to learning or teaching - 2. The classification is more accurate as a
description of what happened in the past and is
happening now. - 3. The framework helps to define practice in some
detail.
14Part IV where is CALL now?? Open CALL
- In general, Open aspect of the technology and
software needs support of an Open attitude
(teachers attitudes, administrators attitudes
and timetabling) -
-
- Restricted
CALL -
- Open CALL
-
15Part V The future of CALL Integrated and
Normalization
- Identification of an end goal for CALL
Normalization ? when the technology becomes
invisible, embedded in everyday practice and
hardly recognized as technology itself. -
- Stages of normalization in CALL
- Early Adopters ? Ignorance/skepticism ? Try once
? Try again ? Fear/awe ? Normalizing ?
Normalization
16- Two fallacies in our approach to CALL
- 1. The Omnipotence Fallacy the excessive awe
of computer technology and the belief that it can
do more than it can - 2. The Sole Agent Fallacy the common
assumption that the key or only factor in
successful implementation of the technology is
the technology itself, neglecting many other
factors required in successful implementation - (eg. Training for teachers, administrative and
pedagogical support, integration into the
timetable)
17- Overcoming the two fallacies
- 1. Emphasis on the analysis of other factors
besides the technology and software, many areas
technology, software, teachers attitudes etc. - 2. Ethnographic study and analysis helps to
identify many interlocking and overlapping
factors that need to be take account to change a
target institution, target our efforts more
precisely. - 3. For individual teacher carry out careful
action research into integration.
18Part VI ConclusionA possible future agenda for
CALL
- Aim/goal Normalization
- Requirements
- ? Changes in technology
- ? Change in attitudes, approach and practice
among teachers and learners - ? Integration into administrative procedures and
syllabuses - Means of achieving the goal
- ? more in-depth ethnographic studies
- ? individual action research
19Part VII Web resources on CALL history
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer-assisted_lan
guage_learning - Delcloque P. (2000) History of CALL
- http//www.ict4lt.org/en/History_of_CALL.pdf
20Part VIII Sum-up of forum discussion
- Normalization
- ? not an easy goal
- ? a long way to away
- ? unlikely to achieve unless technology becomes
cheap and available to everyone - ? its achievement is a matter of time, we are at
one stage - ? stay positive and look forward to the future of
CALL - ? unpredictable, hard to define
21- Fallacies
- ? omnipotence thinking a software program needs
to do everything, while seeing it as teacher /
expenses make people want more features of
software - ? omnipotence technological innovations are
regarded not as supplements but substitutes for
language teachers work - ? Sole agent few training opportunities and
pedagogical support - ? Sole agent a case, use of computer in a high
school