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E-raamat: Emergency Remote Teaching and Beyond: Voices from World Language Teachers and Researchers

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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030840679
  • Formaat - PDF+DRM
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Feb-2022
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030840679

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This timely volume addresses issues pertaining to language teaching, learning and research during the pandemic. In times of a global emergency, the aftermath of emergency remote teaching (ERT) cannot be ignored. The question of how language educators and researchers unleash creativity and employ strategies vis-à-vis ERT still remains to be answered. With practitioners in mind, it covers a broad spectrum of educational settings across continents, target languages and methodologies. Specifically, it reveals viable ways of utilizing digital technologies to bypass social distancing while highlighting the pitfalls and challenges associated with crisis teaching and research. 

This volume comprises two parts: Teacher Voice vicariously transports readers to practitioners compelling stories of how teacher resilience, identity and professional development are crystallized in adaptive pedagogy, online teaching practicum, virtual study programs and communities of practice during ERT. The second part, Researcher Corner, showcases innovative approaches for both novice and seasoned researchers to upskill their toolkits, ranging from case study research and mixed methods designs, to auto- and virtual ethnography and social media research. The array of food for thought provides a positive outlook and inspires us to rethink our current practices and future directions in the post-COVID world.

Regardless of their backgrounds and experiences, readers will be able to relate to this accessible volume that harmonizes research and practice, and speaks from the hearts of all the contributors. 
Part I Teacher Voice: Stakeholder Perspectives Language Teaching in Times of COVID-19
The Emotional Rollercoaster of Lockdown
3(20)
Christine Appel
Jackie Robbins
Infrastructure, Literacy and Communication: The Challenges of Emergency Remote Teaching in a University in Japan
23(22)
Todd James Allen
Part II Teacher Voice: Online Professional Development and Virtual Community of Practice
Teachers' Instructions and Online Professional Development During Emergency Remote Teaching in Indonesia
45(22)
Hanna Sundari
Susianti Rosalina
Lalu Handi Rizal
Surviving ERT: How an Online Professional Learning Community Empowered Teachers During the Covid-19 School Lockdown in Indonesia
67(24)
Maya Defianty
Kate Wilson
Dadan
Transforming from Off-Liners to On-Liners: Voices from Foreign Language Professors in Colombia
91(22)
Kathleen A. Corrales
Lourdes Rey-Paba
Part III Teacher Voice: Teacher Identity and Agency
Emergency Remote Teaching in the Kazakhstan Context: Deprofessionalization of Teacher Identity
113(20)
Kamila Kozhabayeva
Nettie Boivin
Vietnamese Pre-service Teachers' Perceived Development of Employability Capital in Synchronous Learning Amidst the Pandemic
133(20)
Ngoc Tung Vu
Hoa Hoang
Thao Nguyen
Part IV Teacher Voice: Online Practicum and Virtual Study Program
The Adaptation of Action Research into Online Practicum in Unprecedented Times: Opportunities and Constraints
153(20)
Muzeyyen Nazli Gungor
French Language Studies in New Caledonia Despite COVID-19: The Emergency Response Move from In-Country to Virtual Program
173(20)
Beate Mueller
Susan Oguro
Part V Teacher Voice: Language Learners and Adaptive Pedagogy
Implications of a Sudden Shift Online: The Experiences of English Education Students' Studying Online for the First-Time During COVID-19 Pandemic in Japan
193(22)
Jean Kim
Online Instruction as a New Learning Territory for a Filipinized Critical Language Pedagogy: From the Era of Pandemic Onward
215(20)
Juland Dayo Salayo
Fostering Interaction and Motivation in EFL Live Virtual Classes at University
235(26)
Ana Cecilia Cad
Claudia Alejandra Spataro
Paul Alexis Carrera
Part VI Researcher Corner: Auto- and Virtual Ethnographic Research
Teacher Emotion in Emergency Online Teaching: Ecstasies and Agonies
261(28)
Maggie McAlinden
Toni Dobinson
How to Adapt in Crisis: An Autoethnographic Approach to (Re)Building Coursework
289(26)
Katherine Morales
Gabriel Romaguera
Edward Contreras
"I Will Teach from the Heart": Teachers' Beliefs and Practices During an Emergency Remote Language Pedagogy in a Heritage Language School During the COVID-19 Lockdown
315(26)
Anu Muhonen
Emergency Remote Teaching (ERT) or Surveillance? Panopticism and Higher Education in Bangladesh
341(30)
Shaila Sultana
Part VII Researcher Corner: Social Media Research
The Generative Affects of Social Media Scroll-Back Interviews: In Conversation with Spanish as a World Language Teachers During the COVID-19 Lockdown in Australia
371(20)
Danielle H. Heinrichs
Peer Capacity Building in Emergency Remote Teaching: Informal Language Teacher Professional Development on Twitter
391(20)
Karin Vogt
Part VIII Researcher Corner: Case Study Research
Individual and Institutional Responses to the Exigency of Online Teaching: A Case Study from Qatar
411(24)
Mick King
Sedigh (Sid) Mohammadi
Pedagogical Insights into Emergency Remote Teaching: A Case Study of a Virtual Collaboration Project in the Turkish and Hungarian Pre-service Teacher Education Context
435(24)
Isil Gunseli Kacar
Imre Fekete
A Multi-Case Study of English Language Teachers in Vietnam in Emergency Remote Teaching Mediated by Technologies: A Sociocultural Perspective
459(26)
Hanh Dinh
Thu Dao
Part IX Researcher Corner: Mixed Methods Research
Exploring EFL Teachers' Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge and Student Engagement in an Emergency Remote Teaching Context
485(22)
Dian N. Marissa
Wedad Allahji
Listening to Student Voice to Improve the Quality of Emergency Remote Teaching
507(28)
Olga Yashenkova
LSP Teacher Perspectives on Alternative Assessment Practices at European Universities Amid the COVID-19 Crisis and Beyond
535
Agnes Pal
Rita Koris
Julian Chen is a Senior Lecturer of Applied Linguistics/TESOL in the School of Education at Curtin University, Australia. Well-versed in technology-mediated task-based language teaching, 3D virtual teaching/learning, blended learning and action research, his research has been published in TESOL Quarterly, Modern Language Journal, System, CALL, Computers & Education, and among other flagship journals. He is currently the book review editor of the Australian Review of Applied Linguistics (ARAL).