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Technology-Enhanced Language Teaching and Learning: Lessons from the Covid-19 Pandemic [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Liverpool John Moores University, UK), Edited by (Urmia University, Iran), Edited by (Urmia University, Iran)
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The Covid-19 pandemic has directly impacted the way teachers and learners worldwide teach and learn languages, forcing numerous educational activities in technologically-deprived contexts to stop altogether and those in technologically-rich environments to go online on an emergency basis. This volume provides a collection of theoretical and practical insights into the challenges and affordances faced globally during the pandemic and lessons learnt about the application of digital technologies for language teaching and learning. The chapters explore the vital role of technology in its various forms, including the internet, social media, CALL (Computer-Assisted Language Learning), MALL (Mobile Assisted Language Learning), TALL (Technology Assisted Language Learning) and TELL (Technology Enhanced Language Learning). Topics explored include the new avenues digital technology has opened up for language teachers and learners, options and challenges in applying technology in various contexts, and how the second language education industry could have been adversely impacted at the time of the pandemic without technological affordances. The contributions showcase studies from various geographical contexts, revealing how the global crisis was received and tackled differently in Australia, Hong Kong, Iran, Italy, Japan, New Zealand, the UAE, the UK and the USA.

Arvustused

This volume offers truly ground-breaking accounts of recent pedagogical transformations through technology in language education. It uncovers important messages for learners, teachers, teacher educators, researchers, and policy makers about where and how technology should be embedded into the geopolitical, sociocultural, psychological, and pedagogical contexts of language teaching and learning in contemporary society. -- Anne Burns, Curtin University and University of New South Wales, Australia This is a highly accessible edited volume which provides good coverage of key topics and issues on technology-enhanced language learning. This is a must read for anyone interested in how technological tools were adopted by teachers and learners on an emergency basis during the COVID-19 pandemic, what lessons we can learn and how technology plays a key role in the post-pandemic era. -- Li Li, University of Exeter, UK

Muu info

Explores the application of digital technologies to language teaching and learning at the time of the Covid-19 global pandemic, drawing implications for the post-pandemic future.
List of Figures
xii
List of Tables
xiii
List of Contributors
xiv
Foreword: Don't Mention the Pandemic xix
Jozef Colpaert
Acknowledgements xxiii
1 Introduction: Options and Issues in CALL
1(12)
Karim Sadeghi
Michael Thomas
Farah Ghaderi
Part 1 Emergency CALL at the Time of a Pandemic
2 A Distracted Learning Pandemic: The Aftermath of Synchronous Online Courses
13(16)
Larry L. LaFond
3 Italian as a Second Language in Schools during the Covid-19 Pandemic: Exploring Teachers' Perspectives
29(14)
Stefania Ferrari
4 From Emergency Transitions to Teaching English Online: Three Cases
43(16)
Carla Meskill
Wuri Kusumastuti
Dongni Guo
Part 2 Responses to CALL during the Emergency
5 Anger, Excitement, Shame and Pride: Adult English Learners' Attitudes, Perceptions and Emotional Experiences towards Online Learning
59(16)
Lisa Cox
Juyoung Song
6 Study Abroad from Home: Development of L2 Learner Autonomy in an Unprecedented Online Programme during the Covid-19 Pandemic
75(14)
Akihiko Sasaki
Osamu Takeuchi
7 Technology-Enhanced Out-of-Class Autonomous Language Learning in Times of the Covid-19 Pandemic: A Shifting Perspective for Advanced Learners
89(14)
Simone Torsani
8 Invisibly Vulnerable: A Corpus-Based Investigation of Media Representations of Australian EAL/D Students in Covid-19 Lockdown
103(18)
Jessica Morcom
Jianxin Liu
Part 3 Technology Integration into Teaching at the Time of the Pandemic
9 Lockdown with La Casa de Papel: From Social Isolation to Social Engagement with Language
121(14)
Antonie Aim
10 Online Learning in the Time of Coronavirus: Paradigmatic Lessons Learnt through Critical Participatory Action Research
135(16)
John I. Liontas
11 Technology-Mediated Writing Tasks in the Online English Classroom: Focus on Form via Synchronous Videoconferencing
151(16)
Valentina Morgana
Michael Thomas
Part 4 E-Assessment during the Covid-19 Pandemic
12 Formative Assessment in Synchronous Language Teaching in Higher Education during the Covid-19 Pandemic
167(16)
Maria Luisa Carrid-Pastor
13 E-Portfolios as a Technology-Enabled Assessment: Surviving or Accommodating Covid-19
183(14)
Ricky Lam
Marcus Lau
Joanna Wong
14 Keeping Them Honest: Assessing Learning in Online and Digital Contexts
197(16)
Peter Davidson
Christine Coombe
Part 5 Beyond Emergency CALL, Post-Covid-19 Lessons
15 Moving Back into the Classroom while Moving beyond Current Paradigms: Lessons for Post-Covid Language Education
213(14)
Melinda Dooly
16 Deconstructing the `Normalization' of CALL: Digital Inequalities, Decolonization and Post-Pandemic Futures
227(14)
Michael Thomas
17 Conclusion: Learning the Lessons from the Pandemic?
241(8)
Michael Thomas
Karim Sadeghi
Farah Ghaderi
Index 249
Karim Sadeghi is Professor of TESOL at Urmia University, Iran.

Michael Thomas is Professor of Education and Social Justice and Chair of the Centre for Educational Research (CERES) at Liverpool John Moores University, UK.

Farah Ghaderi is Associate Professor of English Literature at Urmia University, Iran.