Multimodality and modals
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
4M ago
My attention was recently drawn (thanks to Grzegorz Śpiewak) to a recent free publication from OUP. It’s called ‘Multimodality in ELT: Communication skills for today’s generation’ (Donaghy et al., 2023) and it’s what OUP likes to call a ‘position paper’: it offers ‘evidence-based recommendations to support educators and learners in their future success’. Its topic is multimodal (or multimedia) literacy, a term used to describe the importance for learners of being able ‘not just to understand but to create multimedia messages, integrating text with images, sounds and video to suit a variety of ..read more
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Mobile learning revisited
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
6M ago
In the world of ELT teacher blogs, magazines, webinars and conferences right now, you would be hard pressed to avoid the topic of generative AI. Ten years ago, the hot topic was ‘mobile learning’. Might there be some lessons to be learnt from casting our gaze back a little more than a decade? One of the first ELT-related conferences about mobile learning took place in Japan in 2006. Reporting on this a year later, Dudeney and Hockly (2007: 156) observed that ‘m-learning appears to be here to stay’. By 2009, Agnes Kukulska-Hulme was asking ‘will mobile learning change language learning?’ Her a ..read more
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Perspectives on language teaching research
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
6M ago
I’ve written about the relationship (or, rather, the lack of one) between language teachers and language teaching research before. I’m talking about the kind of research that is primarily of the ‘what-works’ variety, since that is likely to be of most relevance to teachers. It’s the kind of research that asks questions like: can correction be beneficial to language learners? Or: can spaced repetition be helpful in vocabulary acquisition? Whether teachers find this relevant or not, there is ample evidence that the vast majority rarely look at it (Borg, 2009). See here, for example, for a discus ..read more
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Twee – an edtech cautionary tale
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
When the internet arrived on our desktops in the 1990s, language teachers found themselves able to access huge amounts of authentic texts of all kinds. It was a true game-changer. But when it came to ELT dedicated websites, the pickings were much slimmer. There was a very small number of good ELT resource sites (onestopenglish stood out from the crowd), but more ubiquitous and more enduring were the sites offering downloadable material shared by teachers. One of these, ESLprintables.com, currently has 1,082,522 registered users, compared to the 700,000+ of onestopenglish. The resources on offe ..read more
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Self-paced listening
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
One of the most common criticisms of schooling is that it typically requires learners to study in lockstep, with everyone expected to use the same learning material at the same pace to achieve the same learning objectives. From everything we know about individual learner differences, this is an unreasonable and unrealisable expectation. It is only natural, therefore, that we should assume that self-paced learning is a better option. Self-paced learning is at the heart of technology-driven personalized learning. Often, it is the only meaningfully personalized aspect of technology-delivered cour ..read more
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Design thinking and ELT
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
There has recently been a spate of articles and blog posts about design thinking and English language teaching. You could try ‘Design Thinking in Digital Language Learning’, by Speex, provider of ‘online coaching and assessment solutions’, ‘Design Thinking Activities in the ESL Classroom’, brought to you by Express Publishing, market leaders in bandwagon-jumping, or a podcast on ‘Design thinking’ from LearnJam. Or, if you happen to be going to the upcoming IATEFL conference, there are three presentations to choose from: Design thinking, a sticky side up path to innovators ESP course developme ..read more
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Edtech and sustainability
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
Last September, Cambridge published a ‘Sustainability Framework for ELT’, which attempts to bring together environmental, social and economic sustainability. It’s a kind of 21st century skills framework and is designed to help teachers ‘to integrate sustainability skills development’ into their lessons. Among the sub-skills that are listed, a handful grabbed my attention: Identifying and understanding obstacles to sustainability Broadening discussion and including underrepresented voices Understanding observable and hidden consequences Critically evaluating sustainability claims Understanding ..read more
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Computer-assisted native-speakerism (CAPTs)
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
Recent years have seen a proliferation of computer-assisted pronunciations trainers (CAPTs), both as stand-alone apps and as a part of broader language courses. The typical CAPT records the learner’s voice, compares this to a model of some kind, detects differences between the learner and the model, and suggests ways that the learner may more closely approximate to the model (Agarwal & Chakraborty, 2019). Most commonly, the focus is on individual phonemes, rather than, as in Richard Cauldwell’s ‘Cool Speech’ (2012), on the features of fluent natural speech (Rogerson-Revell, 2021). The fac ..read more
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Generative AI and ELT Materials
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
I must begin by apologizing for my last, flippant blog post where I spun a tale about using generative AI to produce ‘teacher development content’ and getting rid of teacher trainers. I had just watched a webinar by Giuseppe Tomasello of edugo.ai, ‘Harnessing Generative AI to Supercharge Language Education’, and it felt as if much of the script of this webinar had been generated by ChatGPT: ‘write a relentlessly positive product pitch for a language teaching platform in the style of a typical edtech vendor’. In the webinar, Tomasello talked about using GPT-3 to generate texts for language lear ..read more
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Digital literacies literacy
Adaptive Learning in ELT
by philipjkerr
1y ago
You could be forgiven for wondering what, precisely, digital literacies are. In the first edition of ‘Digital Literacies’, Dudeney et al. (2013:2) define the term as ‘the individual and social skills needed to effectively interpret, manage, share and create meaning in the growing range of digital communication channels’. This is pretty broad, and would seem to encompass more or less anything that people do with digital technology, including the advanced arts of trolling and scamming. Nine years later, in the new edition of this book (Pegrum et al., 2022:5), the authors modify their definition ..read more
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