Research and Inspiration from One Year of @actfl #flteach


One year ago I became a member of ACTFL and began receiving the Foreign Language Annals as part of my membership. I meet monthly with the coordinator of modern and classical languages and ESOL here, and we use a bit of that time to discuss research that might direct the ways teachers and students use technology in presenting and learning a second language. I use the FL Annals as a starting point for my part of that conversation, and I suppose the highest praise I could give here would be this: I can’t imagine canceling my membership.

The FL Annals have inspired technology integration ideas, connected some dots in my understanding of second-language acquisition, and given me greater confidence that the work I do with teachers is helping students. Below is a summary of a few articles that have inspired me this year. Though there were many, I’ve selected only two per issue.

Authentic Tasks and Choosing NOT to Grade

In Horst and Pierce’s article, Foreign Languages and Sustainability 1, two things stuck out at me – the important role an authentic task plays in motivating language production and the conscious decision of the professors to AVOID correcting student errors in discussion board forums where students were communicating in an informal register, albeit still in the target language. When integrating technology , the principals of authentic task and a conscious approach to content created in the informal register are important aspects that I’ve seen work in the classroom. This article provides some support.

Building Better Self-Assessors

In Weyer’s article, Speaking Strategies 2 , I found a wonderful strategy to offer teachers who wish to help their students better self-assess: the process of transcription. Though Weyers focuses on how the intentional transcription process pushes higher education students into upper levels of proficiency, the approach can be tailored to secondary education students as well. I’m most excited to promote this technique using the Nanogong module we recently embedded in Moodle, a product that allows students to record their own voice easily and then transcribe the contents in the same web interface.

Attitude Matters

Though it may only have a tangential connection to the use of engaging activities with technology, Conchran, et al., contributed a thoughtful article 3 on what internal elements of our students contribute to their proficiency in a language – their attributions, attitudes, or aptitude? Their conclusion (from the abstract):

“The best predictive model was attitudes leading to aptitude leading to exam grades.” (566)

It seems to me that one reason to include some of the dynamic technology now at our disposal is that, when combined with meaningful, engaging tasks, it has the ability to influence the attitudes our students bring each day to class. While it’s at times easy to dismiss the idea of having “fun” in class, this article seems to support the idea that the relational environment we create in our classes has a great deal of impact on the production of language we see there.

Write More, Grade Less

In Armstrong’s article on graded and ungraded writing 4, she makes this summary statement:

“ Findings suggest that grades had little affect on student writing, and therefore more frequent and more varied ungraded writing assignments may be a productive pedagogical tool for improving the form and content of student writing” (690)

Earlier in the year I had been able to work with a teacher using TodaysMeet to do just that — provide students structured but ungraded opportunities to write about a topic that interested them. As more language teachers attempt the use of Moodle discussion boards, I’ll continue to promote this approach as one way to strengthen student writing.

Your Answer Doesn’t End the Conversation

In Miao and Heining-Boynton’s discussion of IRF and RTI 5, they include a nice table of response strategies teachers can use regardless of a student’s answers to an initial question, the goal being to mandate participation and promote engagement whether an answer is correct or incorrect. Whether used in face-to-face learning or online, awareness of these strategies can aide teachers as they create a culture of participation among their students.

With Assessment, Context Matters

The role of assessment – both for quantity of writing as well as quality – is investigated in an article by Brown, et al. 6 where the authors point out a tension in motivating students to take risks as well as strive for accuracy.

The findings of this article, paired with those of Armstrong above, seem to indicate that each student learning activity must be contextualized in order for students to succeed. If the goal of the activity is rapid, experimental construction of language, these activities are best ungraded. The results of the same activity, though, may be examined later as students find errors and attempt to fix them. Incorporating both tasks while learning language is an important step to ensuring that students attempt more complex language tasks as well as evaluate how effectively they have succeeded at the same.

And, a selection of quotes I found valuable:

“Current psycholinguistic research suggests that, as students begin to use more complex syntactic forms, their accuracy decreases until they have fully acquired the new forms” Horst and Pierce (Fall 2010, 373)

“Seeking broader and more diverse paths to mastery of a foreign language, students find the current two-tiered configuration [“language instruction” in early levels and “literature instruction in advanced courses] to be both stifling and largely irrelevant to major tracks emphasizing the sciences and business” Neville (Winter 2010, 446)
“Teaching is a matter of providing the learner with the right data at the right time and teaching him how to learn, that is, developing in him appropriate learning strategies and means of testing his hypotheses” Corder, 1988, cited by Mojica-Diaz and Sanchez-Lopez (Winter 2010, 473)

“Clearly, a need for striking a pedagogical balance between activizing new content and focusing on accuracy exists and, perhaps, has an analogy in the anecdotal two steps forward, one step back.” Brown, et al. (Spring 2011, 116)

Why use technology? Because it’s part of life.


I recently listened to a fascinating talk by Nick Perkins, entitled “ ;-) , LOL, [_]>, :P and 1337: New literacies and bilingualism“.  I’m currently thinking through a presentation I’ve been invited to help with for a local university conference and Nick’s presentation helped a couple bits to “click” together in my mind.  I’ll embed the video from iatefl below (which is worth a watch, or a listen, in its entirety).

A few highlights for me:

  • Languages are best internalized when the learner is constantly answering the question, ”How can I learn to be myself in another language?”  This is a deep reason to communicate – the idea that language is vital to helping others understand you – not just to understand someone else.
  • Informal communication often isn’t grammatically correct, but it’s the register we use most when communicating “the real me” to other people.  When opening up opportunities for our students’ self-expression, maybe grammar shouldn’t be the first thing we examine.
  • Why use technology?  Perkins doesn’t spend much time in well-worn paths here.  He makes a simple point that I appreciate – we use technology because they use technology.  If students are using technology as they do the work of self-discovery, shouldn’t that be something we use as well?

Thanks for the great talk, Nick.

 

TPACK Cliff’s Notes, Part 1


Today I’m beginning what I hope will be a “Cliff’s Notes” approach to understanding the framework for Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPCK, also known as TPACK), a model organized by Mishra and Koehler, built from the large body of research about education and technology.  These posts will primarily be to hone my own understanding of the concept, but if you find any of the following beneficial or confusing, I always welcome comments.

Summarizing such a far-reaching concept will inevitably result in omissions and understatements.  If you are interested in a community-created resource that might fill out the picture I begin here, please visit the TPACK wiki.  Punya Mishra also manages a great blog, where he highlights what’s happening with the framework around the US and the world.  Finally, the information I’ll be summarizing comes from my reading of a handbook for educators on the TPACK framework, which applies the framework to a number of content areas and contexts.

We should probably begin with the framework itself:

TPACK framework
(image from tpack.org)

The concept is fairly straight-forward.  When a teacher walks into his classroom, he comes with a certain knowledge of content, pedagogy, and technology.  Each of these domains has it’s own set of guidelines, best practices, and popular authors.  Yet, though we can concentrate on one domain or another at a given time, in reality we have to wrestle with all of them, all at once, within a context that is ever-shifting, depending on the given student, period, or (as it often seems in middle school) phase of the moon.

This brings me to a concept that runs through much of the TPACK literature I’ve read thus far — the concept of teaching as a “wicked problem.”  Wicked problems, according to Koehler and Mishra, referencing the work of two earlier researchers Rittel and Webber, “have incomplete, contradictory, and changing requirements ….[and] cannot be solved in a traditional linear fashion” due to the sheer number of variables involved and the tendency of solutions, wherever applied, to create new problems themselves.  To my ear, that sounds just like teaching — thousands of tiny decisions that must be made almost every second of the day, which all, in some way, impact the lives and the learning of kids.

One aspect I like about the framework, in light of this, is that it validates my experience as a teacher.  I have a bit more trust in something that acknowledges the difficulty of the profession up front, and then begins to focus an ordered lens on my practice.

What the framework seems to bring to the table is a method of sorting through each of the three knowledge domains, examining how one relates to another, and then describing what sort of teaching and learning occurs when all meet together, all the while understanding that these domains exist within a context that may change from culture to culture or from moment to moment.  I find such a model, simple in its presentation and sensitive to a teacher’s experience, engaging and encouraging.  I look forward to learning more.