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Köp båda 2 för 3726 kr[Part 5 in particular] offers several unique insights into innovation in the field of CALL ... This book is a lesson for all educational technologists that we should look past the latest fads and instead concentrate on building sustainable platforms that places students learning as the chief priority. * CALL-EJ: Computer-Assisted Language Learning - Electronic Journal * The volume is an invaluable resource for CALL practitioners in a number of respects the research reported in this volume enjoys a wide and colourful array of conceptual and theoretical frameworks, innovative methodological designs and approaches, and contextual diversities and variations in examining the hot topic of sustainability; this make this volume a must-read for CALL practitioners globally. * LINGUISTLIST * The book in its breadth offers much for many audiences: CALL specialists, instructional designers and developers, researchers, teacher trainers ... [and] language teachers themselves ... One of its many strengths is building a clear case that ensuring sustainability in CALL is a shared responsibility. * Applied Linguistics * [This] is an edited volume that provides an excellent opportunity for CALL researchers to examine emerging sites of research as well as innovative research instruments ... The book presents some outstanding research that make use of mixed methods and which go beyond more traditional semi-experimental research designs that typically fail to grasp the ecological complexities of micro contexts such as a cohort or a group of learners. * System * The future of CALL heavily depends on the reusability of content, data structures, software objects, routines, models, concepts and methods. As this new WorldCALL publication shows the many facets of sustainability in CALL, it will inevitably become the bedside book of many CALL scholars. * Jozef Colpaert, editor CALL Journal, University of Antwerp * WorldCALL: Sustainability and Computer-Assisted Language Learning, the product of a world network of innovative research, is a landmark book. It not only shows what we can do with computers and mobile devices in the language learning environment, but also how we can manage the integration of digital technology in a sustainable way. * Vera Menezes * Every week seems to bring a new device or app for language teachers to explore, yet creating sustainable environments, systems, and practices for technology in language teaching and learning is vital if we are to use that technology consistently, wisely and well. True to the WorldCALL 2013 conference in Glasgow that spawned this volume, it is the first to deal with this crucial notion of sustainability in computer-assisted language learning. Covering a broad range of timely topics in its 19 chaptersteacher education, mobile language learning, and research methodology among themit is a significant addition to the CALL literature, one that illuminates the current state and potential of sustainable CALL research, development, and practice for both established professionals and those new to the field. -- Philip L. Hubbard * Philip L. Hubbard, Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at Stanford University, USA * The Fourth WorldCALL conference marks two important aspects of the original inspiration for this truly worldwide, truly humanistic forum. This volume of carefully curated conference papers amply demonstrates CALL's proven Sustainability, after 3 decades of initially somewhat bumpy progress. The sheer range of this valuable books topics, technologies and practitioners from the technical have-countries to the technically less wealthy, also proves that CALL is a great motivator, for teachers and learners across the planet. I recommend it as a rich resource for specialists and curious beginners alike. There is much to enjoy and enrich in these pages. -- Peter Liddell * Peter Liddell, Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria, Canada, Former Member, Steering Committee, WorldCALL I-III *
Ana Gimeno-Sanz is Professor of English Language in the Department of Applied Linguistics at the Universitat Politcnica de Valncia (UPV), Spain. Mike Levy is Honorary Professor of Second Language Studies in the School of Languages and Cultures at the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia. Franoise Blin is Senior Lecturer at Dublin City University, Ireland. David Barr is Head of the School of Modern Languages at the University of Ulster, Northern Ireland.
Foreword, Ana Gimeno-Sanz and David Barr Introduction, Mike Levy, Ana Gimeno-Sanz, David Barr and Franoise Blin PART I: TEACHER EDUCATION AND CALL 1. Learning for the long haul: Developing perceptions of learning affordances in CALL teachers Karen Haines, Unitec, Auckland, New Zealand 2. Designing digitally-based didactic proposals for English teacher education programs: an analysis of a Brazilian experience with podcasts Lucas Moreira dos Anjos-Santos, Monash University, Victoria, Australia Vera Lcia Lopes Cristovo, State University of Londrina, Paran, Brazil 3. Creating pedagogical knowledge through electronic materials in a distance telecollaboration project for pre-service teacher trainees Marcin Kleblan, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland M Camino Bueno-Alastuey, Universidad Pblica de Navarra, Spain 4. Promoting Student Collaborative Reflective Interaction Using Wikis and VoiceThreads Sabrina Priego, Universit Laval, Qubec, Canada 5. Transformative learning: The developmental processes of L2 teachers as effective users of online resources for language teaching and learning Sandra Morales and Scott Windeatt, Newcastle University, UK PART II: NORMALISATION OF CALL 6. Factors that determine CALL integration into Modern Languages Courses in Brazil Claudia Beatriz M.J. Martins and Herivelto Moreira, Universidade Tecnolgica Federal do Paran, Curitiba, Brazil 7. Data and elicitation methods in interaction-based research Marie-Jose Hamel, University of Ottawa, Canada Franoise Blin, Dublin City University, Ireland Catherine Caws, University of Victoria, Canada Trude Heift, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada Mathias Schulze, University of Waterloo, Canada Bryan Smith, Arizona State University, USA 8. Factors for sustainable CALL Monica Ward, Dublin City University, Ireland PART III: CALL SYSTEMS 9. From a vision to reality: paving the way for CALL sustainability by harmonizing theory, practice and technology in the creation of an EFL b-learning environment for Chilean learners Emerita Baados, Universidad de Concepcin, Chile 10. Sustaining and building online communities of practice through language economy Jonathan White, Hgskolan Dalarna, Sweden 11. The development of self-regulated learning behaviour in out-of-class CALL activities in a university EFL blended learning course Yasushige Ishikawa and Craig Smith, Kyoto University of Foreign Studies, Japan Reiko Akahane-Yamada and Misato Kitamura, ATR Intelligent Robotics and Communication Laboratories, Japan Yasushi Tsubota and Masatake Dantsuji, Academic Center for Computing and Media Studies, Kyoto University, Japan PART IV: MOBILE-ASSISTED LANGUAGE LEARNING 12. An evidence-based study of Hong Kong university students mobile-assisted language learning experience Qing Ma, The Hong Kong Institute of Education, Hong Kong 13. Students perspectives on the benefits and constraints of using mobile apps for learning languages Caroline Steel, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia 14. What to consider for effective mobile-assisted language learning: design implications from an empirical analysis Heyoung Kim, Chung-Ang University, South Korea 15. Improving learners reading skills through instant short messages: a sample study using WhatsApp Mar Gutirrez-Colon Plana, Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona, Spain Ana Gimeno, Universitat Politcnica de Valncia, Spain Christine Appel and Joseph Hopkins, Universitat Oberta de Catalunya, Spain PART V: INNOVATION IN CALL 16. Eyetracking in CALL present and future Breffni ORourke and Claire Prendergast, The University of Dublin, Ireland Lijing Shi, The London School of Economics and Political Science, UK Btyan Smith, Arizona State University, USA Ursula Stickler, Open University, UK 17. Using text analysers as an aid to examining the effects of task complexity on academic L2 writing Erifili Roubou, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece 18. How to tell digital stories