2nd Edition

Teaching & Researching: Computer-Assisted Language Learning

By Ken Beatty Copyright 2010
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

     

    Computers play a crucial and rapidly evolving role in education, particularly in the area of language learning. Far from being a tool mimicking a textbook or teacher, Computer-Assisted Language Learning (CALL) has the power to transform language learning through the pioneering application of innovative research and practices.

     

    Technological innovation creates opportunities to revisit old ideas, conduct new research and challenge established beliefs, meaning that the field is constantly undergoing change. This fully revised second edition brings teachers and researchers up-to-date by offering:

    • A comprehensive overview of CALL and current research issues
    • Step-by-step instructions on conducting research projects in CALL
    • Extensive resources in the form of contacts, websites and free software references
    • A glossary of terms related to CALL

    Closely linked to other branches of study such as autonomy in language learning and computer science, CALL is at the cutting edge of current research directions. This book is essential reading for all teachers and researchers interested in using CALL to make language learning a richer, more productive and more enjoyable task.

     

    Ken Beatty has taught at colleges and universities in Canada, Asia and the Middle East. His publications include more than 100 textbooks for learning English as a Second Language, as well as various websites, CD-ROMs and educational videos.

     

    Contents

    General Editors’ Preface  

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    Section I   Key concepts

    1 The emergence of CALL

    1.1   A broad discipline

    1.2   Technology driving CALL

    1.3   The changing focus of research in CALL  

    Summary

    2 A brief history of CALL   

    2.1   CALL in the 1950s and 1960s

    2.2   Simulations  

    2.3   CALL in the 1970s and 1980s

    2.4   CALL in the 1990s  

    2.5   CALL in the 21st Century

    Summary

    3 Hypertext, hypermedia and multimedia

    3.1   Hypertext   

    3.2   Hypermedia   

    3.3   Multimedia  

    3.4   Antecedents of multimedia   

    3.5   Science fiction and CALL

    3.6   The printed book and CALL   

    3.7   Applications to general learning 

    3.8   Applications of multimedia to language learning  

    Summary

    4 Eight CALL applications   

    4.1   Word processing  

    4.2   Games 

    4.3   Literature

    4.4   Corpus linguistics  

    4.5   Computer-mediated communication  

    4.6   WWW resources

    4.7   Adapting other materials for CALL  

    4.8   Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) and Mobile Telephones   

    Summary

    Section II The place of CALL in research and teaching   

    5 Second-language Acquisition and models of instruction

    5.1   Concepts in SLA, behaviourism and constructivism

    5.2   Comprehensible input and output

    5.3   Behaviourist  models of instruction

    5.4   Constructivism   

    Summary

    6 Collaboration and negotiation of meaning

    6.1   The place of collaboration in CALL  

    6.2   Structuring collaboration

    6.3   Differences between collaboration and other terms

    6.4   The range of collaboration and CALL  

    6.5   Collaboration at the computer  

    6.6   Benefits of collaborative learning at the computer   

    6.7   Collaboration, CALL and SLA  

    6.8   Collaboration at the computer as evidenced by discourse 

    6.9   Challenges to collaboration   

    6.10    Challenges to collaboration in a CALL context

    6.11    Discourse that evidences challenges to collaboration  

    Summary

    7 Defining a model of CALL  

    7.1   Defining a model  

    7.2   The need for a CALL model   

    7.3   A model of current non-CALL language learning   

    7.4   Dunkin and Biddle’s model in a CALL context

    7.5   Various views of CALL   

    7.6   Teacher and pupil classroom behavior: activities used in CALL

    7.7   A virtual classroom  

    7.8   Aspects of a CALL model   

    Summary

    8   Theoretical and pedagogical concerns  

    8.1   Concerns for software development

    8.2   Pedagogical concerns for classroom practice   

    8.3 &uating software

    8.4   Learning and working styles

    8.5   Evolving technology

    8.6   Commercial software

    8.7   Making better use of existing materials  

    8.8   Copyright and plagiarism   

    8.9   Viruses

    8.10    Safety online  

    8.11    Technological have-nots

    Summary

    Section III    Researching CALL

    9 Current research interests

    9.1   A new field: reporting CALL research

    9.2   Approaches to research in CALL  

    9.3   The computer as a tool of research   

    9.4   The role of commercial publishers

    9.5   Reviewing current studies: a survey  

    9.6   Conducting research   

    9.7   Action research

    Summary

    10    Research

    10.1    Research context 1: The literature review  

    10.2    Research context 2: A pilot study  

    10.3    Research context 3: Corpus linguistics

    10.4    Research context 4: Error analysis

    10.5    Research context 5: The experiment

    10.6    Research context 6: A case study  

    10.7    Research context 7: The survey

    10.8    Research context 8: The ethnographic approach 

    Conclusion  

    Section IV   Resources   

    Glossary of key terms

    References

    Index

     

    Biography

    Ken Beatty has taught at colleges and universities in Canada, Asia and the Middle East. His publications include more than 100 textbooks for learning English as a Second Language, as well as various websites, CD-ROMs and educational videos.