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1
Language learning through interaction: Online and in the classroom
In: The Coastal Review: An Online Peer-reviewed Journal (2022)
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2
In-Game Social Interactions to Facilitate ESL Students' Morphological Awareness, Language and Literacy Skills
In: Computer Science Faculty Publications and Presentations (2021)
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3
Commonplace and Mirroring for Self-Reflexivity in Secondary Language Arts: A Value-Creative Approach in a Virtual Learning Space
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Commonplace and Mirroring for Self-Reflexivity in Secondary Language Arts: A Value-Creative Approach in a Virtual Learning Space ...
Coggins, Iain M.. - : Columbia University, 2021
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5
Comparing Instructional Methods for Address Pronouns in Second Language German ...
Ryan, Caitlin. - : Arts, 2021
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6
Collaborative Digital Problem-Solving: Power, Relationships, and Participation
In: Applied Linguistics Faculty Publications and Presentations (2021)
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7
Rogers' Diffusion of Innovation Used to Explore Special Education Administrators' Self-Reported Technology Skills and Attitudes Regarding Speech Language Pathology Telepractice ...
Muller, Carolyn Wheeler. - : Drexel University, 2021
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8
The opinion of Slovene (mother tongue) teachers on distance learning in primary schools ; Mnenje učiteljev slovenščine (mater inščine) o poučevanju na daljavo v osnovni šoli
In: CEPS Journal 11 (2021) Special Issue, S. 383-406 (2021)
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9
Competing voices: Dialogic perspectives on Chinese children’s use of touch screen devices in a New Zealand early childhood education setting
Cao, Dandan. - : The University of Waikato, 2021
Abstract: Internationally, preschool children’s use of touch screen devices is increasingly discussed from the perspectives of teachers and or caregivers. However, there is little discussion of this topic from a cross-cultural perspective. Furthermore, children’s own voices on their touch screen experiences are missing in the discourse. This study considers Chinese immigrant preschool children’s experiences of touch screen devices in a New Zealand Early Childhood Education (ECE) setting, aiming to discern the competing Voices of New Zealand ECE teachers, Chinese immigrant caregivers and children themselves. To achieve this aim, initially I sought to understand everyday touch screen use from the perspectives of New Zealand ECE teachers and Chinese immigrant caregivers, then explore children’s voices in this discussion by videoing their engagement with touch screens, and finally explore a possible new layer of competing Voices between adults and children. I set out to interrogate touch screen use by young learners in a social and aesthetic way by applying Mikhail Bakhtin’s dialogic theory to explore the potential for competing voices around preschool children’s touch screen use. I used the genre as my unit of analysis as it allowed me to examine voices, not only through utterances but also gestural expressions across different spaces. I used Heteroglossia as a central framework for analysis because it enabled me to understand multiple voices in social interaction. A visual method was used to collect the data because this method enabled me to see multiple forms of children’s voices in addition to their utterances, and to identify further competing voices through children’s employment of various genres when using touch screens across ECE centre and home contexts. The Voice of conditional support and the Voice of opposition or reluctance were identified as competing Voices within and across New Zealand ECE teachers, and within and across Chinese caregivers. The findings highlight that the Voices of teachers and caregivers in my study are not necessarily in competition with each other, but are instead in competition within and across each group. Six genres were recognised during children’s touch screen use: the adult-led learning genre, the compliance genre, the invisible speaker genre, the child-led learning genre, the resistance genre and the whisper genre. Through these genres, children’s Outside-in Voice and Inside-out Voice were identified according to the source of voices. The Outside-in Voice reflects the influence of adults’ voices on the child, while the Inside-out Voice illustrates the child’s agency in expressing their inner voices. Building on the tension within children’s Voices, a new layer of competing Voices between adults and children was discerned: the Voice of adult power and the Voice of child agency. My findings have implications for children, ECE teachers, caregivers and policymakers. Children could be supported to express their voices on issues that affect their lives and to spend more time on free play. Implications for ECE teachers are that teachers need to be invited and given support to understand the complexity of children’s voices through genres. Teachers need to be helped to appreciate that there are benefits of standing back and giving children space to be creative and learn collaboratively and or independently. Caregivers could be encouraged to relax some of their authority, to listen to children’s voices and to include children’s voices in decision-making on issues that affect them. Caregivers could also consider the conditions they place around their child’s touch screen use such as time limit and the extent of scaffolding. Policymakers would be advised to provide teachers with professional learning and development with regard to how to scaffold children’s touch screen use and digital play into play-based learning. Areas for research include further investigation of the genres children employ during touch screen use and the use of interpretations other than Bakhtinian dialogism to do this. Research could focus on the touch screen learning experiences of a wider group of children, including children who are immigrants and children of different ages in different cultural contexts.
Keyword: Bakhtinian dialogism; Children's voices; Chinese -- Education (Early childhood) -- New Zealand -- Attitudes; Competing voices; Computers and children -- New Zealand -- Cross-cultural studies; Cross-cultural learning experiences; Early childhood education; Early childhood education -- New Zealand -- Computer-assisted instruction; Early childhood teachers -- New Zealand -- Attitudes; Immigrant children -- Education (Early childhood) -- New Zealand -- Attitudes; Touch screen devices; Touch screens -- Study and teaching (Early childhood) -- New Zealand -- Cross-cultural studies
URL: https://hdl.handle.net/10289/14613
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10
The effectiveness of Duolingo on Spanish learners' spelling ability ; The effectiveness of Duolingo on Spanish leaners' language learning : learners' spelling ability
Ghulam, Muzhda. - 2020
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11
Effective practices for building an online French immersion program ...
Berube, Helene M.. - : Electronic version published by Vancouver Island University, 2020
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12
Un Nuevo Acercamiento a la Enseñanza del Español como Segunda Lengua: El Modelo Neurocognitivo ; A New Approach to Teaching Spanish as a Second Language: The Neurocognitive Model
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13
Implementation and Evaluation of Computer-Assisted Science Vocabulary Modules With Students With an Intellectual Disability and Autism: An Action Research Study
In: Theses and Dissertations (2020)
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14
Digital Immigrant Teachers and Their Implementation of Technology
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15
Examining the impact of technology-mediated oral communicative tasks on students’ willingness to communicate and communicative performance
In: Graduate Theses and Dissertations (2019)
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16
The effects of using blended learning approach on EFL students' essay writing at Shaqra University, Saudi Arabia
Alrouji, Omar Obaid. - : Sydney, Australia : Macquarie University, 2019
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17
Survey of L2 English CMC activities ...
Moffat, Andrew. - : The University of Nottingham, 2019
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18
The effect of digital apps on Vietnamese EFL learners’ receptive vocabulary acquisition : a case study of quizlet and paper flashcards
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Post-French Immersion Student Perceptions of Parallel Concordancing: A Mixed Methods Study
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20
Indiana high school students' outcomes and ubiquitous technology ; Student outcomes ubiquitous technology
Hall, Mark J. (Mark Jeffery). - 2018
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