Description
This presentation examines the benefits and challenges that participation in open communities brings to learners, particularly in enabling them to develop their digital and linguistic skills, whilst making a visible contribution to society. It reports on the evaluation of a task in which advanced language learners joined an online volunteer community to work on the translation of subtitles using open content and tools. Their motivation, expectations and concerns were recorded in a pre-course questionnaire, and a post-course questionnaire was used to gather information on their experiences. Feedback was also gathered independently from course designers and course facilitators.
Results from learners were very positive with almost all participants reporting that the task had improved their learning of the language, enjoyment during learning, and learning of new research and digital skills. Participants particularly valued having choices to select the content and tools used, and developing their learner autonomy. Negative aspects clustered around the steep learning curve required to familiarise themselves with the technology, information and support available to carry out the task.
One of the challenges for educators is to strike the right balance between providing guidance, support and sufficient scaffolding for learners, and allowing them enough room to engage in meaningful problem-solving and the development of their autonomy as learners (Martínez Carrasco, 2016). The enormous gains in learning and motivation reported by learners must be tempered by the need to develop the required participatory and digital skills that would enable learners to fully benefit from these opportunities (Beaven et al, 2014)
This contribution will consider the gains for learners and educators that an open pedagogy offers, and highlight the drawbacks and constraints, both ethical and pedagogical, that the implementation of such an approach poses for educators.
Beaven, T. , Hauck, M., Comas-Quinn, A., Lewis, T. and de los Arcos, B. (2014), MOOCs: Striking the right balance between facilitation and self-determination. Journal of Online Learning and Teaching, 10(1) pp. 31–43.
Kiraly et al (eds) (2016), Towards Authentic Experiential Learning in Translator Education, Mainz: Mainz University Press.
Martínez Carrasco, R. (2016) Wikitrad: Implementing Authentic Experiential Work in the Inverse Translation Classroom, presentation given at the didTRAD conference, Barcelona, 7-8 July 2016.
Ritzer, G. and Jurgenson, N. (2010), Production, Consumption, Prosumption: The Nature of Capitalism in the Age of the Digital ‘Prosumer’, Journal of Consumer Culture, 10(1), pp. 13-36.
Wiley, D. (2013, online), What is Open Pedagogy?, Blog entry, 21 October. Available from: http://opencontent.org/blog/archives/2975 [Last accessed 25/11/2016.]
Participants
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Francisco Iniesto
joined 7 years, 8 months ago -
Rebecca Sellers
joined 7 years, 8 months ago -
ALT
joined 7 years, 9 months ago