File(s) not publicly available
Mobile devices and learner interaction inside and outside the classroom
Language students nowadays frequently bring personal mobile devices to the classroom. The variation in devices may limit their pedagogic exploitation to negotiated student – student work outside lesson time and the bringing of results back for teacher-directed follow-up activities. Yet the notion of mobility and the co-construction of conversations in the process (Kukulska-Hulme, 2009: 159) are of greater value than the learning activities themselves. The paper reports on the use by lower-intermediate (IELTS 4.5) English language students of their mobile phones. The outcome suggests that mobile assisted language learning promotes greater student - student interaction in the context of structured collaborative learning both inside and outside the classroom and offers a way for language students to develop their own blended learning materials. Reference Kukulska-Hulme, A and L. Shield. 2008. ‘An overview of mobile assisted language-learning: From content delivery to supported collaboration and interaction’. ReCALL 20/3: 271-289.
History
Publication status
- Published
Publisher
IATEFLPage range
172-174Presentation Type
- other
Event name
IATEFL 2013 Liverpool ConferenceEvent location
Arena and Convention Centre, LiverpoolEvent type
conferenceEvent date
8-12 April 2013Book title
IATEFL 2013 Liverpool Conference SelectionsPlace of publication
FavershamISBN
9781901095531Department affiliated with
- Sussex Centre for Language Studies Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes