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Using Wireless Notebooks in Project-based Classes. Blended Language Learning. William Kay, Paul Gemmell, Andrew Johnson, Don Hinkelman,. 33rd JALT International Conference November 24, 2007 Olympic Conference Center, Tokyo, Japan. Content. Problem Research questions Our Study
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Using Wireless Notebooks in Project-based Classes Blended Language Learning William Kay, Paul Gemmell, Andrew Johnson, Don Hinkelman, 33rd JALT International Conference November 24, 2007 Olympic Conference Center, Tokyo, Japan
Content • Problem • Research questions • Our Study • Our Activities • What we learned • The Future
Why Go Wireless? No computer rooms available 2. Students already had notebook computers Low cost for school
1. Demand for Computer Rooms • One computer room available on Wednesday mornings: A-201 • Four teachers need computer rooms at the same time
2. Needs & Opportunities • The teachers • 4 teachers – 4 styles • All preferred to use powerpoint and internet for project-based language learning • The students • Social Information Majors - 192(computer science) • All Ss owned same type notebook computers, required by department
Year 1 Research Questions April 2006 -- March 2007 • Can wireless notebooks and internet activities be incorporated into classic desk-and-chair classrooms, incorporating CALL in a non-computer laboratory? • How do students respond to using wireless notebooks in a language learning class?
The classes • Two morning periods • 2nd year Social Info majors (3 classes) • 1st year Social Info majors (3 classes) • 3 wireless classrooms • 14 - 90 minute classes/semester • 25-35 students/class
Objectives/Approach • Oral communication • Project-based • Blended learning
Curriculum/Course Features • Authenticity Utilizing authentic online resources in an effective and meaningful capacity.
1st Year Students Self and Japan Sapporo Personal interests Japanese celebrities Japanese culture Summer holidays Ghost stories 2nd Year Students International Planning a trip abroad Int’l celebrities Int’l culture Foreign movies Course Syllabus
Course Preparation • Set up Moodle courses • One Course for each class • Pre-enrolled students • One Teacher’s area • Space for sharing documents/ ideas
Class demo: Project X Introduce a project that has a variety of activities - f2f and computer
Benefits of teaching in a Wireless Classroom • Can easily work with or without computers • Easy visual contact • Computer is student’s own • Students can roam within the classroom, and beyond • Cost to university
Drawbacks of teaching in a Wireless Classroom • Connections may be lost • Lack of network between student and teacher’s computer • Batteries may die • Computers may be forgotten • Printing connections
Technical Problems with Wireless Example: Conflicts from two competing wireless LAN systems
Student Responses • 17-question survey
New Research Questions • Year Two: April 2007 • How provide language learning exercises that support the projects? • How provide printed materials for classroom activities & absentees’ reference? • Year Three: April 2008 • How redesign our teaching spaces to give wired stability and teaching flexibility? • Other new questions?
Questions ? ? ? • Our questions… • How to reduce tech time, increase speaking time? • How to share our activities more quickly? (repository?) • How to gear projects to direct student needs? • How to add language support activities? (online quizzes?) • How redesign the classroom spaces? • Your questions… ? ? ? ? ? ?
Remaining slides omit from JALT 2007 presentation, save as reference
Wireless class goalsuccess rate by week Students who had success logging on the first try
Wireless class goalsuccess rate by week • Possible Reasons • Switched Rooms to reduce cross-reception • New wireless system
Internet Introduction http://www.teachingideas.co.uk/welcome/internet/page1.htm
Permeation ofMobile Technology Based on reports by 20 year-old English Department students at Sapporo Gakuin University during the 2003 term *projection
Actual Internet Device Permeation Sapporo Gakuin University Student Population n=5000 Estimated Input Devices to Web e-Learning *previous projection **current projection
1st Year Students Self and Japan Sapporo Personal interests Japanese celebrities Japanese culture Summer holidays Ghost stories 2nd Year Students International Planning a trip abroad Int’l celebrities Int’l culture Foreign movies Course Syllabus
Mobile Technology Baseline of Student Population Based on personal estimates of 20 year-old English Department students in a mid-level Japanese University during the 2003 term *projection