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”When CALL is the better choice”. Jane Vinther, Ph.D. University of Southern Denmark jvinther@language.sdu.dk CALL 2008 conference 29.08-02.09.2008 University of Antwerp. Level C1 European Framework. Students …
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”When CALL is the better choice” Jane Vinther, Ph.D. University of Southern Denmark jvinther@language.sdu.dk CALL 2008 conference 29.08-02.09.2008 University of Antwerp
Level C1 European Framework Students … • Can understand with ease virtually everything heard or read. Can summarise information from different spoken and written sources, reconstructing arguments and accounts in a coherent presentation. Can express him/herself spontaneously, very fluently and precisely, differentiating finer shades of meaning even in more complex situations. (Common European Framework, p.24. http://www.coe.int/t/dg4/linguistic/Source/Framework_EN.pdf.)
“In its original sense, communicative competence certainly includes grammatical competence, but unfortunately the term communicative competence is now widely understood in language pedagogy to mean the ability to communicate; to get meaning across” (Garrett,1995:350).
The role of (and need for ?) metalinguistic knowledge • Færch (1985: 190): ”an important heuristic tool” . • Basturkmen, Loewen & Ellis (2002:11): ”The more explicitly a linguistic item is addressed, the more likely students are to notice and incorporate it in their production”.
The role of (and need for ?) metalinguistic knowledge • Sharwood Smith (2004:276): ”metalinguistic knowledge is as open to automatisation as any other domain of knowledge”
THE STUDY • Primary study : large comparative study of CALL effective ness • Secondary study: small subsequent study focused on achievement groups
THE STUDY(primary and secondary) • Subjects: Danish advanced learners of English • Treatment: 10 weeks of metalinguistic input – 57 sentences processed Instructional language: English • Assessment: a. pre-test and post-test b. explicit and implicit test sections
CALL framework • Chenu, Gayraud, Martinie & Wu (2007): Acquisition of French relative clauses * similar achievements for CALL and NON-CALL * the less proficient students benefited most from CALL
CALL framework • CONCLUSION: CALL appears to be more supportive of less proficient students than the traditional approach WHY? • Chenu: 1) learners work in their own pace 2) single modality medium (written)
CALL framework • The present study: 1) learners work in their own pace 2) single modality medium (written) 3) immediate and individual feedback 4) supportive features of the interface 5) the interface supports structural approach 6) task completion
CALL framework • CALL efficacy and achievement groups QUESTIONS: • Is it related to metalinguistic knowledge? • Is it related to student type? • Is it related to more focused attention?
References • Basturkmen, H., Loewen, S. & Ellis, R. (2002). Metalanguage in focus on form in the communicative classroom. Language Awareness, 11, 1-13. • Chapelle, C. A. (2001). Computer Applications in Second language Acquisition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Chapelle, C. A. (2003). English language learning and technology. Amsterdam & Philadelphia: John Benjamins. • Chenu, F., Gayraud, F., Martinie, B. & Wu, T. (2007). Is computer assisted language learning (CALL) efficient for grammar learning? An experimental study in French as a second language [Electronic Version]. The JALT CALL Journal, 3(3). • Færch, C. (1985). Meta talk in the FL classroom. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 7, 184-199. • Garrett, N. (1995). ICALL and second language acquisition. In M. V. Holland, J. D. Kaplan, & M. R. Sams (Eds.), Intelligent Language Tutors. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. • Sharwood Smith, M. (2004). In two minds about grammar: On the interaction of linguistic and metalinguistic knowledge in performance. Transaction of the Philosophical Society, 102, 225-280.