SlideShare una empresa de Scribd logo
1 de 27
Researching language
learning and teaching
beyond the classroom
Phil Benson
Department of Linguistics
Macquarie University
How important is learning beyond
classroom?
• Think about a foreign language that you know
well.
• What percentage of your knowledge and
ability would you attribute to
– learning and using the language in class
___%
– learning and using the language outside class
___%
Why is language learning beyond the
classroom important?
• Deconstruction of traditional classroom instruction –
self-access centres, distance learning, workplace
learning, learning for practical purposes, etc.
• Globalization and the shrinking world – media
technologies and mobility; access to ‘authentic’
language (Kramsch 2014)
• Learners often begin in the classroom and continue
elsewhere
• Pickard (1995) – learners attribute high levels of
proficiency to learning beyond the classroom
How much research is carried out in
classrooms?
Research articles on
language teaching and
learning published in MLJ
2013
Classroom-based = 30
Not classroom-based = 7
Total = 37
Classroom research
Second language classroom research investigates
what happens in second language classrooms.
van Lier, L. (1990: 174)
…[a cover term for] a whole range of research
studies on classroom language learning and teaching.
The obvious unifying factor is that the emphasis is
solidly on trying to understand what goes on in the
classroom setting.
Allwright, D. & Bailey, K. M. (1991: 2)
Classroom-based studies of
language teaching and learning
processes
9 9
Measurement of language learning
variables – participants enrolled in
language programmes
21
23
Measurement of language learning
variables – participants not enrolled
in language programmes
2
Studies of language learning beyond
the classroom
5 5
Measurement studies
• Focus on variables (e.g., strategy use, anxiety,
language or discourse competencies);
sometimes with experimental treatment
• Participants are enrolled in language classes at
the time of the research
• Typically the researchers’ own class or a class
in the researchers’ institution.
• How does this influence findings?
Studies of language learning beyond
the classroom (MLJ 2014)
Kääntä, et al. (2013) Finnish reality TV contestants
talking about language and
language learning
Social interaction
Back (2013) Symbolic competence of Spanish-
Quichua bilingual musicians in
Quichua community
Language
socialization
Rampton (2013) Discourse of adult migrant
language learner in UK
Discursive stylization
Trentman (2013) Use of Arabic in study abroad in
Egypt (n=18)
Language contact
profile
Moore and MacDonald
(2013)
Intergenerational language
learning in a native Canadian
community
Literacy as social
practice
Spinning the ‘classroom norm’ around
If language learning beyond the
classroom were the norm…
• What kind of models of language learning
would we need?
• Where would the classroom fit in?
• Where would measurement studies fit in?
• What kinds of research would fill our journals?
A descriptive model
Dimension Refers to Terms
Location Where the learning takes
place (setting)
out-of-class <-> out-of-
class
Formality Degree of structure – role
of qualifications
informal <-> formal
Pedagogy The senses in which
teaching is involved
non-instructed <->
instructed
Locus of control Who makes the major
decisions about learning
self-directed <-> other-
directed
(Benson 2011)
Other dimensions…?
• Mediation – texts, materials, technologies, resources
used
• Modality – form-focused, reading-based,
interactional, etc
• Socialty – alone or with others (social networks –
Palfreyman 2011)
• Linguistic – what kinds of language are involved –
creativity, complexity, etc.
• Trajectory – development over time (Chik 2014)
Where does the classroom fit in?
• Any setting can be described in terms of
formality, pedagogy, etc, etc
• The classroom is one setting among many that
are likely to be available as affordances for
learning
– Horizontally - within a spatial environment (e.g., a
town or city, a school or university)
– Vertically – within a temporal environment (e.g.,
for an individual over a period of years)
Where would measurement
studies fit in?
• Two aptitude studies (MLJ 2013)
• Schools and classrooms as affordances for
measurement of variables
• Variables in learning beyond the classroom
Language aptitude studies
Thompson (2013)
79 Brazilian language learners attending classes
at a university-affiliated English language
program – foreign language aptitude test
(CANAL-FT) + interviews on language
experience.
Language aptitude studies
Dahlen, K., and Caldwell-Harris, C. (2013)
88 students taking Psychology at Boston
University (56 never mastered an L2; 25 early
bilingual; 7 learned an L2 for everyday
interaction) – aptitude test (MLAT) + initial
vocab learning under 4 conditions + recognition
and recall tests
Language aptitude studies
Thompson (2013)
Previous language experience has an effect on aptitude –
suggests that aptitude is ‘dynamic’.
Dahlen, K., and Caldwell-Harris, C. (2013)
Monolinguals scored higher than bilinguals on aptitude test
Authors speculate that, “the MLAT measures cognitive abilities
that help learn a FL in a classroom setting and thus may be most
valid for monolingual Englishspeakers…” (910)
Location and research findings
• Location influences sample; composition of
the sample influences findings
• Inclusion of ‘out-of-class’ learners reveals
instrument bias towards classroom learning
• Context in which research is conducted also
influences findings
The importance of context
“Time and time again when researchers conduct
experiments, they find that children’s abilities
differ from one experiment to another…. People
often show dissociations in their behavior,
seeming to know things when they are tested in
one way, while seemingly unaware of the same
information when they are tested in another
way.”
Larsen-Freeman and Cameron (2008: 131).
Schools and classrooms
• Measurement studies rely on samples >30
• Where do we easily find such samples?
• MLJ – 21 studies of intact classes or year
groups (one study of school district, 2
unenrolled samples)
• Ou-of-class studies tend to be ethnographic,
individual or collective case studies (though
some are classroom-based!)
Variables in learning beyond the
classroom
• Standard instruments designed for classroom
implementation
• Motivation, strategy use, anxiety, etc. tend to
‘present’ differently.
• Specific variables – e.g., ‘persistence’ in use of
broadcast materials (Umino 2005)
What kinds of studies will we find
in journals?
• Fewer measurement studies / more
qualitative, descriptive studies
• Studies of learning in specific settings
– Murray, Fujishima, Uzuku 2014 (space and place)
– Gao 2007; 2009
• Horizontal, ‘ecological’ studies
– Palfreyman 2014; Menezes, 2011
– Lamb, 2007; Lai 2014
What kinds of studies will we find
in journals?
• Vertical, ‘narrative’ studies of language
learning histories and experiences
– Barkhuizen et al 2013
– Benson & Nunan 2005; Chik 2014
• Learning in interaction studies
– Zimmermann 2011; Tudini 2007
• The roles of teachers and classroom teaching
– Ryan 1997; Chern & Dooley 2014
References
• Back, M. (2013). “La Orquesta”: Symbolic Performance in a Multilingual Community of
Practice. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 383-396.
• Barkhuizen, G., Benson, P., and Chik, A. (2013) Narrative inquiry in language teaching and
learning research. London: Routledge.
• Benson, P. and Nunan, D. (Eds.), (2005). Learners’ stories: Difference and diversity in
language learning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
• Benson, P. and Reinders, H. (Eds.). (2011). Beyond the language classroom. Basingstoke:
Palgrave Macmillan.
• Chern, C-L., and Dooley, K. (2014). Learning English by walking down the street. ELT Journal,
68 (2), 113-123.
• Chik, A. (2014). Digital gaming and language learning: Autonomy and community. Language
Learning and Techonology, 18 (2), 85-100.
• Dahlen, K., and Caldwell-Harris, C. (2013). The Modern Language Journal, 97 (4), pp. 902-
916.
• Gao, X. (2007). A tale of Blue Rain Café: A study on the online narrative construction about a
community of English learners on the Chinese mainland. System, 35(2), 259-270.
• Gao, X. (2009). ‘English corner’ as an out-of-class learning activity. English Language Teaching
Journal, 63(1), 60-67.
References
• Gao, X. (2010). Autonomous language learning against all odds. System, 38, 580-590.
• Kääntä, L., et al. (2013). Learning English Through Social Interaction: The Case of Big Brother
2006, Finland. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 340-349.
• Kramsch, C. (2014). Teaching foreign languages in an era of globalization: An introduction.
The Modern Language Journal, 98 (1), 296-311.
• Lai, C. (2014). Perceiving and traversing in-class and out-of-class learning: accounts from
foreign language learners in Hong Kong. Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching,
• Lamb, M. (2004). “It depends on the students themselves”: Independent language learning at
an Indonesian state school. Language, Culture and Curriculum, 17(3), 229-245.
• Larsen-Freeman, D., and Cameron, L. (2008). Complex systems and applied linguistics.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
• Menezes, V. (2011). Affordances for language learning beyond the classroom. In P. Benson
and H. Reinders (Eds.), Beyond the language classroom (pp. 59-71). Basingstoke: Palgrave
Macmillan.
• Moore, D., and MacDonald, M. (2013). Language and Literacy Development in a Canadian
Native Community: Halq’émylem Revitalization in a Stó:lō Head Start Program in British
Columbia. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (3), pp. 702-719.
References
• Murray, G. (Ed.) (2014). Social Dimensions of Autonomy in Language Learning. Basingstoke:
Palgrave Macmillan.
• Murray, G., Fujishima, N., and Uzuku, M. (2014). The semiotics of place: Autonomy and
space. In G. Murray (Ed.), Social Dimensions of Autonomy in Language Learning (pp. 81-99).
Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
• Palfreyman, D. M. (2011). Family, friends, and learning beyond the classroom: Social
networks and social capital in language learning. In P. Benson and H. Reinders (Eds.), Beyond
the language classroom (pp. 17-34). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
• Palfreyman, D. M. (2014). The ecology of learner autonomy. In G. Murray (Ed.), Social
Dimensions of Autonomy in Language Learning (pp. 175-192). Basingstoke: Palgrave
Macmillan.
• Pickard, N. (1995). Out-of-class language learning strategies: Three case studies. Language
Learning Journal, 12, 35-37.
• Rampton, B. (2013). Styling in a Language Learned Later in Life. The Modern Language
Journal, 97 (2), pp. 361-382.
• Ryan, S. (1997). Preparing learners for independence: Resources beyond the classroom. In P.
Benson and P. Voller (Eds.), Autonomy and independence in language learning (pp. 215-224).
London: Longman.
References
• Thompson, A. S. (2013). The Interface of Language Aptitude and Multilingualism:
Reconsidering the Bilingual/Multilingual Dichotomy. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (3),
pp. 685-701.
• Trentman, E. (2013). Arabic and English During Study Abroad in Cairo, Egypt: Issues of Access
and Use. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 457-473.
• Tudini, V. (2007). Negotiation and intercultural learning in Italian native speaker chat rooms.
The Modern Language Journal, 91 (4), 577-61.
• Umino, T. (2005). Learning a second language with broadcast materials at home: Japanese
students’ long-term experiences. In P. Benson and D. Nunan (Eds.), Learners’ stories:
Difference and diversity in language learning (pp. 134-149). Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
• van Lier, L. (1990). Classroom research in second language acquisition. Annual Review of
Applied Linguistics, 10, 173-186.
• Zimmerman, E. (2011). Talk about language use: ‘I know a little about your language’. In P.
Benson and H. Reinders (Eds.), Beyond the language classroom (pp. 88-105). Basingstoke:
Palgrave Macmillan.

Más contenido relacionado

La actualidad más candente

Developing academic vocabulary in ELLs
Developing academic vocabulary in ELLsDeveloping academic vocabulary in ELLs
Developing academic vocabulary in ELLs
NOR RUBA'YAH ABD RAHIM
 

La actualidad más candente (20)

Critical issues
Critical issuesCritical issues
Critical issues
 
TESOL Pedagogy: The Communicative Approach
TESOL Pedagogy:  The Communicative ApproachTESOL Pedagogy:  The Communicative Approach
TESOL Pedagogy: The Communicative Approach
 
English language as a Medium of Instruction Inside the Classroom: Perception ...
English language as a Medium of Instruction Inside the Classroom: Perception ...English language as a Medium of Instruction Inside the Classroom: Perception ...
English language as a Medium of Instruction Inside the Classroom: Perception ...
 
Enhancing participation through translanguaging
Enhancing participation through translanguagingEnhancing participation through translanguaging
Enhancing participation through translanguaging
 
Week 5
Week 5Week 5
Week 5
 
Authenticity and CLIL: Examining Authenticity from an International CLIL Pers...
Authenticity and CLIL: Examining Authenticity from an International CLIL Pers...Authenticity and CLIL: Examining Authenticity from an International CLIL Pers...
Authenticity and CLIL: Examining Authenticity from an International CLIL Pers...
 
Week 2
Week 2Week 2
Week 2
 
Translanguaging as pedagogic strategy and as resource for identity performanc...
Translanguaging as pedagogic strategy and as resource for identity performanc...Translanguaging as pedagogic strategy and as resource for identity performanc...
Translanguaging as pedagogic strategy and as resource for identity performanc...
 
CORPUS-INTERGRATED DATA-DRIVEN LEARNING IN LANGUAGE CLASSROOM: A REVIEW OF E...
CORPUS-INTERGRATED DATA-DRIVEN LEARNING IN LANGUAGE CLASSROOM:  A REVIEW OF E...CORPUS-INTERGRATED DATA-DRIVEN LEARNING IN LANGUAGE CLASSROOM:  A REVIEW OF E...
CORPUS-INTERGRATED DATA-DRIVEN LEARNING IN LANGUAGE CLASSROOM: A REVIEW OF E...
 
English 10 (thesis)
English 10 (thesis)English 10 (thesis)
English 10 (thesis)
 
Fourth generation of applied linguistics
Fourth generation of applied linguisticsFourth generation of applied linguistics
Fourth generation of applied linguistics
 
Week 1
Week 1Week 1
Week 1
 
Medium of instruction in the L2 classroom
Medium of instruction in the L2 classroomMedium of instruction in the L2 classroom
Medium of instruction in the L2 classroom
 
applied linguistics Chapter One
applied linguistics Chapter Oneapplied linguistics Chapter One
applied linguistics Chapter One
 
2013 zhang & liu
2013 zhang & liu2013 zhang & liu
2013 zhang & liu
 
Developing academic vocabulary in ELLs
Developing academic vocabulary in ELLsDeveloping academic vocabulary in ELLs
Developing academic vocabulary in ELLs
 
DH_syllabus_typology
DH_syllabus_typologyDH_syllabus_typology
DH_syllabus_typology
 
Poyhonen Birmingham2009
Poyhonen Birmingham2009Poyhonen Birmingham2009
Poyhonen Birmingham2009
 
Linguistically Responsive Teaching: Strategies to Support International Stude...
Linguistically Responsive Teaching: Strategies to Support International Stude...Linguistically Responsive Teaching: Strategies to Support International Stude...
Linguistically Responsive Teaching: Strategies to Support International Stude...
 
430-F12 Class 5: Andrews LEA Approach
430-F12 Class 5: Andrews LEA Approach430-F12 Class 5: Andrews LEA Approach
430-F12 Class 5: Andrews LEA Approach
 

Destacado

Teaching Listening
Teaching ListeningTeaching Listening
Teaching Listening
brandybarter
 
ESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using Technology
ESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using TechnologyESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using Technology
ESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using Technology
brandybarter
 
Understanding CASAS/ABE Test Results
Understanding CASAS/ABE Test ResultsUnderstanding CASAS/ABE Test Results
Understanding CASAS/ABE Test Results
jwillia8
 
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schools
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schoolsInterpretation of scores and the grading system in public schools
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schools
Airah Torres
 
Questionnaire Results and Analysis
Questionnaire Results and AnalysisQuestionnaire Results and Analysis
Questionnaire Results and Analysis
antonia-roberts
 
Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir
Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir
Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir
Dr.Shazia Zamir
 
Pie chart survey analysis
Pie chart survey analysisPie chart survey analysis
Pie chart survey analysis
brittdoran_ox
 
Administering,scoring and reporting a test ppt
Administering,scoring and reporting a test pptAdministering,scoring and reporting a test ppt
Administering,scoring and reporting a test ppt
Manali Solanki
 
Introduction to statistics
Introduction to statisticsIntroduction to statistics
Introduction to statistics
madan kumar
 
Introduction to statistics
Introduction to statisticsIntroduction to statistics
Introduction to statistics
akbhanj
 

Destacado (20)

Chapter 14
Chapter 14Chapter 14
Chapter 14
 
Test Developers Panel Discussion (2010) Full
Test Developers Panel Discussion (2010) FullTest Developers Panel Discussion (2010) Full
Test Developers Panel Discussion (2010) Full
 
Teaching Listening
Teaching ListeningTeaching Listening
Teaching Listening
 
ESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using Technology
ESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using TechnologyESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using Technology
ESL Teachers' Perceptions of Using Technology
 
The hero's journey for ESL teachers
The hero's journey for ESL teachersThe hero's journey for ESL teachers
The hero's journey for ESL teachers
 
Understanding CASAS/ABE Test Results
Understanding CASAS/ABE Test ResultsUnderstanding CASAS/ABE Test Results
Understanding CASAS/ABE Test Results
 
Blooms digital taxonomy for ESL teachers
Blooms digital taxonomy for ESL teachersBlooms digital taxonomy for ESL teachers
Blooms digital taxonomy for ESL teachers
 
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schools
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schoolsInterpretation of scores and the grading system in public schools
Interpretation of scores and the grading system in public schools
 
Questionnaire Results and Analysis
Questionnaire Results and AnalysisQuestionnaire Results and Analysis
Questionnaire Results and Analysis
 
Interpretation of Assessment Results
Interpretation of Assessment ResultsInterpretation of Assessment Results
Interpretation of Assessment Results
 
Describing and Interpreting Test Scores: Frequency Distribution to Measures o...
Describing and Interpreting Test Scores: Frequency Distribution to Measures o...Describing and Interpreting Test Scores: Frequency Distribution to Measures o...
Describing and Interpreting Test Scores: Frequency Distribution to Measures o...
 
Interpreting Test Scores
Interpreting Test ScoresInterpreting Test Scores
Interpreting Test Scores
 
Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir
Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir
Methods of interpreting test scores by Dr.Shazia Zamir
 
Statistics for interpreting test scores
Statistics for interpreting test scoresStatistics for interpreting test scores
Statistics for interpreting test scores
 
Pie chart survey analysis
Pie chart survey analysisPie chart survey analysis
Pie chart survey analysis
 
Administering,scoring and reporting a test ppt
Administering,scoring and reporting a test pptAdministering,scoring and reporting a test ppt
Administering,scoring and reporting a test ppt
 
Data Analysis Using Spss T Test
Data Analysis Using Spss   T TestData Analysis Using Spss   T Test
Data Analysis Using Spss T Test
 
Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS)
Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS)Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS)
Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS)
 
Introduction to statistics
Introduction to statisticsIntroduction to statistics
Introduction to statistics
 
Introduction to statistics
Introduction to statisticsIntroduction to statistics
Introduction to statistics
 

Similar a Researching language learning beyond the classroom

“The state of the field effects of program type, personality, and language b...
“The state of the field  effects of program type, personality, and language b...“The state of the field  effects of program type, personality, and language b...
“The state of the field effects of program type, personality, and language b...
mmebrady
 
9722609胡佳瑩 Betty
9722609胡佳瑩 Betty9722609胡佳瑩 Betty
9722609胡佳瑩 Betty
kdlsldn
 
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Hamizah Osman
 
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Hamizah Osman
 
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Hamizah Osman
 
Betty Final Proposal3
Betty Final Proposal3Betty Final Proposal3
Betty Final Proposal3
betty122508
 
1230 Presentation Ppt Betty
1230 Presentation Ppt Betty1230 Presentation Ppt Betty
1230 Presentation Ppt Betty
betty122508
 
9722608簡瑋婷Sadia
9722608簡瑋婷Sadia9722608簡瑋婷Sadia
9722608簡瑋婷Sadia
kdlsldn
 
SYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docx
SYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docxSYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docx
SYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docx
Deogalvez3
 

Similar a Researching language learning beyond the classroom (20)

“The state of the field effects of program type, personality, and language b...
“The state of the field  effects of program type, personality, and language b...“The state of the field  effects of program type, personality, and language b...
“The state of the field effects of program type, personality, and language b...
 
9722609胡佳瑩 Betty
9722609胡佳瑩 Betty9722609胡佳瑩 Betty
9722609胡佳瑩 Betty
 
LITERACY PRACTICES AMONG TERTIARY STUDENTS IN THE WESTERN CAPE, SOUTH AFRICA
LITERACY PRACTICES AMONG TERTIARY STUDENTS IN THE WESTERN CAPE, SOUTH AFRICALITERACY PRACTICES AMONG TERTIARY STUDENTS IN THE WESTERN CAPE, SOUTH AFRICA
LITERACY PRACTICES AMONG TERTIARY STUDENTS IN THE WESTERN CAPE, SOUTH AFRICA
 
International Journal of Education (IJE)
International Journal of Education (IJE)International Journal of Education (IJE)
International Journal of Education (IJE)
 
Applied linguistics and language teacher education.pdf
Applied linguistics and language teacher education.pdfApplied linguistics and language teacher education.pdf
Applied linguistics and language teacher education.pdf
 
Factors Affecting Language Learning Strategies
Factors Affecting Language Learning StrategiesFactors Affecting Language Learning Strategies
Factors Affecting Language Learning Strategies
 
Factors that Affects Language Learning Strategies
Factors that Affects Language Learning StrategiesFactors that Affects Language Learning Strategies
Factors that Affects Language Learning Strategies
 
Five Factors Affecting LLS
Five Factors Affecting LLS Five Factors Affecting LLS
Five Factors Affecting LLS
 
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
 
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
 
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
Language education in_asia_vol3_iss2_2012
 
Staff development 0810
Staff development 0810Staff development 0810
Staff development 0810
 
Betty Final Proposal3
Betty Final Proposal3Betty Final Proposal3
Betty Final Proposal3
 
Language Gardening Practices of English-Medium Instruction Teachers in Higher...
Language Gardening Practices of English-Medium Instruction Teachers in Higher...Language Gardening Practices of English-Medium Instruction Teachers in Higher...
Language Gardening Practices of English-Medium Instruction Teachers in Higher...
 
Factors That Affecting LLS
Factors That Affecting LLSFactors That Affecting LLS
Factors That Affecting LLS
 
1230 Presentation Ppt Betty
1230 Presentation Ppt Betty1230 Presentation Ppt Betty
1230 Presentation Ppt Betty
 
9722608簡瑋婷Sadia
9722608簡瑋婷Sadia9722608簡瑋婷Sadia
9722608簡瑋婷Sadia
 
Assessing vocabulary
Assessing vocabularyAssessing vocabulary
Assessing vocabulary
 
Factors Affecting Language Learning Strategies_GE6533
Factors Affecting Language Learning Strategies_GE6533Factors Affecting Language Learning Strategies_GE6533
Factors Affecting Language Learning Strategies_GE6533
 
SYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docx
SYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docxSYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docx
SYLLABUS - THEORIES OF LANGUAGE ACQUISITION.docx
 

Más de Phil Benson

Más de Phil Benson (10)

Ways of seeing
Ways of seeingWays of seeing
Ways of seeing
 
Teachers' perspectives on autonomy
Teachers' perspectives on autonomyTeachers' perspectives on autonomy
Teachers' perspectives on autonomy
 
Autonomy and the brain
Autonomy and the brainAutonomy and the brain
Autonomy and the brain
 
Informal learning in new media environments: Translanguaging, sociality and i...
Informal learning in new media environments: Translanguaging, sociality and i...Informal learning in new media environments: Translanguaging, sociality and i...
Informal learning in new media environments: Translanguaging, sociality and i...
 
Translanguaging and the globalization of YouTube
Translanguaging and the globalization of YouTubeTranslanguaging and the globalization of YouTube
Translanguaging and the globalization of YouTube
 
Pop culture English
Pop culture EnglishPop culture English
Pop culture English
 
The 'geographies' of YouTube
The 'geographies' of YouTubeThe 'geographies' of YouTube
The 'geographies' of YouTube
 
Popular culture and education: How it teaches and how we learn
Popular culture and education: How it teaches and how we learnPopular culture and education: How it teaches and how we learn
Popular culture and education: How it teaches and how we learn
 
English identity east asian pop
English identity east asian popEnglish identity east asian pop
English identity east asian pop
 
Informal learning and the globalization of Internet social media
Informal learning and the globalization of Internet social mediaInformal learning and the globalization of Internet social media
Informal learning and the globalization of Internet social media
 

Último

Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please PractiseSpellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
AnaAcapella
 

Último (20)

Fostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds in the Classroom
Fostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds  in the ClassroomFostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds  in the Classroom
Fostering Friendships - Enhancing Social Bonds in the Classroom
 
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptxWellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
Wellbeing inclusion and digital dystopias.pptx
 
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structureSingle or Multiple melodic lines structure
Single or Multiple melodic lines structure
 
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdfFood safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
Food safety_Challenges food safety laboratories_.pdf
 
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptxGoogle Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
Google Gemini An AI Revolution in Education.pptx
 
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The BasicsIntroduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
Introduction to Nonprofit Accounting: The Basics
 
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
Sensory_Experience_and_Emotional_Resonance_in_Gabriel_Okaras_The_Piano_and_Th...
 
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
How to Create and Manage Wizard in Odoo 17
 
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POSHow to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
How to Manage Global Discount in Odoo 17 POS
 
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptxSKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
SKILL OF INTRODUCING THE LESSON MICRO SKILLS.pptx
 
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please PractiseSpellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
Spellings Wk 3 English CAPS CARES Please Practise
 
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptxHMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
HMCS Vancouver Pre-Deployment Brief - May 2024 (Web Version).pptx
 
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
 
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptxUnit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
Unit-V; Pricing (Pharma Marketing Management).pptx
 
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
TỔNG ÔN TẬP THI VÀO LỚP 10 MÔN TIẾNG ANH NĂM HỌC 2023 - 2024 CÓ ĐÁP ÁN (NGỮ Â...
 
Unit 3 Emotional Intelligence and Spiritual Intelligence.pdf
Unit 3 Emotional Intelligence and Spiritual Intelligence.pdfUnit 3 Emotional Intelligence and Spiritual Intelligence.pdf
Unit 3 Emotional Intelligence and Spiritual Intelligence.pdf
 
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdfKey note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
Key note speaker Neum_Admir Softic_ENG.pdf
 
Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Kodo Millet  PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...Kodo Millet  PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
Kodo Millet PPT made by Ghanshyam bairwa college of Agriculture kumher bhara...
 
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual  Proper...
General Principles of Intellectual Property: Concepts of Intellectual Proper...
 
Application orientated numerical on hev.ppt
Application orientated numerical on hev.pptApplication orientated numerical on hev.ppt
Application orientated numerical on hev.ppt
 

Researching language learning beyond the classroom

  • 1. Researching language learning and teaching beyond the classroom Phil Benson Department of Linguistics Macquarie University
  • 2. How important is learning beyond classroom? • Think about a foreign language that you know well. • What percentage of your knowledge and ability would you attribute to – learning and using the language in class ___% – learning and using the language outside class ___%
  • 3. Why is language learning beyond the classroom important? • Deconstruction of traditional classroom instruction – self-access centres, distance learning, workplace learning, learning for practical purposes, etc. • Globalization and the shrinking world – media technologies and mobility; access to ‘authentic’ language (Kramsch 2014) • Learners often begin in the classroom and continue elsewhere • Pickard (1995) – learners attribute high levels of proficiency to learning beyond the classroom
  • 4. How much research is carried out in classrooms? Research articles on language teaching and learning published in MLJ 2013 Classroom-based = 30 Not classroom-based = 7 Total = 37
  • 5. Classroom research Second language classroom research investigates what happens in second language classrooms. van Lier, L. (1990: 174) …[a cover term for] a whole range of research studies on classroom language learning and teaching. The obvious unifying factor is that the emphasis is solidly on trying to understand what goes on in the classroom setting. Allwright, D. & Bailey, K. M. (1991: 2)
  • 6. Classroom-based studies of language teaching and learning processes 9 9 Measurement of language learning variables – participants enrolled in language programmes 21 23 Measurement of language learning variables – participants not enrolled in language programmes 2 Studies of language learning beyond the classroom 5 5
  • 7. Measurement studies • Focus on variables (e.g., strategy use, anxiety, language or discourse competencies); sometimes with experimental treatment • Participants are enrolled in language classes at the time of the research • Typically the researchers’ own class or a class in the researchers’ institution. • How does this influence findings?
  • 8. Studies of language learning beyond the classroom (MLJ 2014) Kääntä, et al. (2013) Finnish reality TV contestants talking about language and language learning Social interaction Back (2013) Symbolic competence of Spanish- Quichua bilingual musicians in Quichua community Language socialization Rampton (2013) Discourse of adult migrant language learner in UK Discursive stylization Trentman (2013) Use of Arabic in study abroad in Egypt (n=18) Language contact profile Moore and MacDonald (2013) Intergenerational language learning in a native Canadian community Literacy as social practice
  • 9. Spinning the ‘classroom norm’ around
  • 10. If language learning beyond the classroom were the norm… • What kind of models of language learning would we need? • Where would the classroom fit in? • Where would measurement studies fit in? • What kinds of research would fill our journals?
  • 11. A descriptive model Dimension Refers to Terms Location Where the learning takes place (setting) out-of-class <-> out-of- class Formality Degree of structure – role of qualifications informal <-> formal Pedagogy The senses in which teaching is involved non-instructed <-> instructed Locus of control Who makes the major decisions about learning self-directed <-> other- directed (Benson 2011)
  • 12. Other dimensions…? • Mediation – texts, materials, technologies, resources used • Modality – form-focused, reading-based, interactional, etc • Socialty – alone or with others (social networks – Palfreyman 2011) • Linguistic – what kinds of language are involved – creativity, complexity, etc. • Trajectory – development over time (Chik 2014)
  • 13. Where does the classroom fit in? • Any setting can be described in terms of formality, pedagogy, etc, etc • The classroom is one setting among many that are likely to be available as affordances for learning – Horizontally - within a spatial environment (e.g., a town or city, a school or university) – Vertically – within a temporal environment (e.g., for an individual over a period of years)
  • 14. Where would measurement studies fit in? • Two aptitude studies (MLJ 2013) • Schools and classrooms as affordances for measurement of variables • Variables in learning beyond the classroom
  • 15. Language aptitude studies Thompson (2013) 79 Brazilian language learners attending classes at a university-affiliated English language program – foreign language aptitude test (CANAL-FT) + interviews on language experience.
  • 16. Language aptitude studies Dahlen, K., and Caldwell-Harris, C. (2013) 88 students taking Psychology at Boston University (56 never mastered an L2; 25 early bilingual; 7 learned an L2 for everyday interaction) – aptitude test (MLAT) + initial vocab learning under 4 conditions + recognition and recall tests
  • 17. Language aptitude studies Thompson (2013) Previous language experience has an effect on aptitude – suggests that aptitude is ‘dynamic’. Dahlen, K., and Caldwell-Harris, C. (2013) Monolinguals scored higher than bilinguals on aptitude test Authors speculate that, “the MLAT measures cognitive abilities that help learn a FL in a classroom setting and thus may be most valid for monolingual Englishspeakers…” (910)
  • 18. Location and research findings • Location influences sample; composition of the sample influences findings • Inclusion of ‘out-of-class’ learners reveals instrument bias towards classroom learning • Context in which research is conducted also influences findings
  • 19. The importance of context “Time and time again when researchers conduct experiments, they find that children’s abilities differ from one experiment to another…. People often show dissociations in their behavior, seeming to know things when they are tested in one way, while seemingly unaware of the same information when they are tested in another way.” Larsen-Freeman and Cameron (2008: 131).
  • 20. Schools and classrooms • Measurement studies rely on samples >30 • Where do we easily find such samples? • MLJ – 21 studies of intact classes or year groups (one study of school district, 2 unenrolled samples) • Ou-of-class studies tend to be ethnographic, individual or collective case studies (though some are classroom-based!)
  • 21. Variables in learning beyond the classroom • Standard instruments designed for classroom implementation • Motivation, strategy use, anxiety, etc. tend to ‘present’ differently. • Specific variables – e.g., ‘persistence’ in use of broadcast materials (Umino 2005)
  • 22. What kinds of studies will we find in journals? • Fewer measurement studies / more qualitative, descriptive studies • Studies of learning in specific settings – Murray, Fujishima, Uzuku 2014 (space and place) – Gao 2007; 2009 • Horizontal, ‘ecological’ studies – Palfreyman 2014; Menezes, 2011 – Lamb, 2007; Lai 2014
  • 23. What kinds of studies will we find in journals? • Vertical, ‘narrative’ studies of language learning histories and experiences – Barkhuizen et al 2013 – Benson & Nunan 2005; Chik 2014 • Learning in interaction studies – Zimmermann 2011; Tudini 2007 • The roles of teachers and classroom teaching – Ryan 1997; Chern & Dooley 2014
  • 24. References • Back, M. (2013). “La Orquesta”: Symbolic Performance in a Multilingual Community of Practice. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 383-396. • Barkhuizen, G., Benson, P., and Chik, A. (2013) Narrative inquiry in language teaching and learning research. London: Routledge. • Benson, P. and Nunan, D. (Eds.), (2005). Learners’ stories: Difference and diversity in language learning. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • Benson, P. and Reinders, H. (Eds.). (2011). Beyond the language classroom. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. • Chern, C-L., and Dooley, K. (2014). Learning English by walking down the street. ELT Journal, 68 (2), 113-123. • Chik, A. (2014). Digital gaming and language learning: Autonomy and community. Language Learning and Techonology, 18 (2), 85-100. • Dahlen, K., and Caldwell-Harris, C. (2013). The Modern Language Journal, 97 (4), pp. 902- 916. • Gao, X. (2007). A tale of Blue Rain Café: A study on the online narrative construction about a community of English learners on the Chinese mainland. System, 35(2), 259-270. • Gao, X. (2009). ‘English corner’ as an out-of-class learning activity. English Language Teaching Journal, 63(1), 60-67.
  • 25. References • Gao, X. (2010). Autonomous language learning against all odds. System, 38, 580-590. • Kääntä, L., et al. (2013). Learning English Through Social Interaction: The Case of Big Brother 2006, Finland. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 340-349. • Kramsch, C. (2014). Teaching foreign languages in an era of globalization: An introduction. The Modern Language Journal, 98 (1), 296-311. • Lai, C. (2014). Perceiving and traversing in-class and out-of-class learning: accounts from foreign language learners in Hong Kong. Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching, • Lamb, M. (2004). “It depends on the students themselves”: Independent language learning at an Indonesian state school. Language, Culture and Curriculum, 17(3), 229-245. • Larsen-Freeman, D., and Cameron, L. (2008). Complex systems and applied linguistics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. • Menezes, V. (2011). Affordances for language learning beyond the classroom. In P. Benson and H. Reinders (Eds.), Beyond the language classroom (pp. 59-71). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. • Moore, D., and MacDonald, M. (2013). Language and Literacy Development in a Canadian Native Community: Halq’émylem Revitalization in a Stó:lō Head Start Program in British Columbia. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (3), pp. 702-719.
  • 26. References • Murray, G. (Ed.) (2014). Social Dimensions of Autonomy in Language Learning. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. • Murray, G., Fujishima, N., and Uzuku, M. (2014). The semiotics of place: Autonomy and space. In G. Murray (Ed.), Social Dimensions of Autonomy in Language Learning (pp. 81-99). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. • Palfreyman, D. M. (2011). Family, friends, and learning beyond the classroom: Social networks and social capital in language learning. In P. Benson and H. Reinders (Eds.), Beyond the language classroom (pp. 17-34). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. • Palfreyman, D. M. (2014). The ecology of learner autonomy. In G. Murray (Ed.), Social Dimensions of Autonomy in Language Learning (pp. 175-192). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. • Pickard, N. (1995). Out-of-class language learning strategies: Three case studies. Language Learning Journal, 12, 35-37. • Rampton, B. (2013). Styling in a Language Learned Later in Life. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 361-382. • Ryan, S. (1997). Preparing learners for independence: Resources beyond the classroom. In P. Benson and P. Voller (Eds.), Autonomy and independence in language learning (pp. 215-224). London: Longman.
  • 27. References • Thompson, A. S. (2013). The Interface of Language Aptitude and Multilingualism: Reconsidering the Bilingual/Multilingual Dichotomy. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (3), pp. 685-701. • Trentman, E. (2013). Arabic and English During Study Abroad in Cairo, Egypt: Issues of Access and Use. The Modern Language Journal, 97 (2), pp. 457-473. • Tudini, V. (2007). Negotiation and intercultural learning in Italian native speaker chat rooms. The Modern Language Journal, 91 (4), 577-61. • Umino, T. (2005). Learning a second language with broadcast materials at home: Japanese students’ long-term experiences. In P. Benson and D. Nunan (Eds.), Learners’ stories: Difference and diversity in language learning (pp. 134-149). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. • van Lier, L. (1990). Classroom research in second language acquisition. Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 10, 173-186. • Zimmerman, E. (2011). Talk about language use: ‘I know a little about your language’. In P. Benson and H. Reinders (Eds.), Beyond the language classroom (pp. 88-105). Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.