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PRODID:-//#OER17//EN
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DTSTART:20170406T135000Z
DTEND:20170406T145000Z
DTSTAMP:20170301T131808Z
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-gb:Learning to speak on a Spanish LMOOC [1548]
DESCRIPTION:Room: Seminar 6\nTrack: Inst/Org Politics\nThe acquisition of speaking skills is often viewed as the biggest challenge for language learners. It is a general belief that it can be learnt only through face-to-face practice. Although MOOCs are viewed as rich and flexible learning modality with enormous potential\, as Bárcena et al. (2014) emphasise there is still doubt that LMOOCs will actually be useful in helping students gain a command of a foreign language. This study aims to contribute to the body of research on LMOOCs by answering the following research questions: (i) How do learners feel about the possibilities of acquiring speaking skills on an LMOOC? (ii) Do they experience foreign language anxiety with regard to speaking? Data is obtained from over 500 beginner learners of Spanish participating on a Spanish for Beginners Programme consisting of six four-week Courses that cover level A1 of the CEFR\, offered by The Open University on FutureLearn platform. In order to foment collaborative learning\, engagement and interaction are encouraged from the very beginning which is also supported by the platform as discussion spaces are built into the activities. Continuous instructor presence is ensured by a mentor/educator providing comments to student discussions every day.\n\nWe analyse data provided on reflective questionnaires and gained from discourse on discussion forums. Most of our respondents (85.8%) think that listening and speaking skills can be learnt on an online course equally well as reading and writing skills. They find listening activities with listen and repeat exercises by far the most useful to achieve this.\n\nAs for foreign language anxiety\, we could assume that on a massive online course students experience little anxiety as they don’t actually face “uncomfortable” synchronous speaking situations. This is not borne out in our study\, the data clearly shows that speaking activities trigger much more anxiety than any other type of language activity. A bit less than half of our respondents do the recording activities\, but it is only the 16.3% of them who actually upload it despite the fact that whenever they receive a feedback they find it ‘very useful’ or ‘fairly useful’. The main reason for not uploading their recordings is ‘feeling intimidated’. Students’ comments also reflect this anxiety. They often apologise for their pronunciation (e.g. “I think it will require more listening as I can roll my rr's but I sound like a drunken lowlander singing...”)\, while they rarely do so because of their limited grammar or lack of vocabulary.\n\nWe finish the presentation by making recommendations on how we can facilitate speaking activities on an LMOOC and how to attenuate foreing language anxiety on these courses.\n\nReference\n\nBárcena\, Elena\, Timothy Read\, Elena Martín-Monje & Mª Dolores Castrillo. (2014). “Analysing student participation in Foreign Language MOOCs: a case study”\, In Ulrike Cress & Carlos Delagado Kloss (eds.) EMOOCs 2014 Proceedings of the European MOOC Stakeholder Summit 2014. 11–17.\n\n \nhttps://oer17.oerconf.org/sessions/learning-to-speak-on-a-spanish-lmooc-1548/
LOCATION:Seminar 6
URL:https://oer17.oerconf.org/sessions/learning-to-speak-on-a-spanish-lmooc-1548/
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