Conceptualisation and development of multimedia courseware in a tertiary educational context: juxtaposing approach, content and technology considerations

ReCALL ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
RUTH TRINDER

Developing multimedia courseware for successful integration into a wider system necessitates close attention to a multitude of factors. After a brief literature survey and a critical examination of some overly enthusiastic claims concerning the benefits of multimedia, this paper proposes a flexible framework for CALL development that takes the interrelations between approach, content, and technology-based variables into account. It contends that some of these variables are predetermined by the educational context, whereas others reflect the developers’ views of what constitutes an optimal language learning environment. The main part of the paper provides a detailed account of how these development factors shaped the design of multimedia materials for a large-scale project at the Vienna University of Economics and Business Administration. It argues for a balanced approach to learner control that, while allowing learners to interact with the materials according to their needs and preferences, provides enough learner guidance for those who prefer a more structured approach to learning. Special attention is paid to the often problematical areas of learner style suitability, feedback, and transparency of structure and content.

2014 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 3-11
Author(s):  
Zuzana Pešková

In 2006, the town council of Slany decided to respond to the new trend of regional policy in the Central Bohemia region and focused on the revitalization of the historic core of the town. The large-scale project was assigned to a team of professionals (teachers and graduates of the Faculty of Civil Engineering of the Czech Technical University in Prague), led by Professor Sykora. Team members are to deal with issues of historical centre. The project presented a challenge to test theory, principles and procedures in practical design. The projected area featured Masaryk Square and 22 adjacent streets defined by the existing town walls. The reconstruction project of Vinarickeho Street was the first part of the overall project of revitalization of the historic core of the town chosen to implement. This reconstruction was one of the most technically, organizationally and financially complex works that have been undertaken in Slany recently. Construction started in November 2010 and lasted one year. Although this is a project of smaller scope, thanks to its complexity, sensitive approach and craftsmanship it brought the creators the price Construction of the Year 2012 in the Central Bohemia region and advanced to the second round in the competition Construction of the Year 2012 in Czech Republic.


2014 ◽  
Vol 978 ◽  
pp. 27-30
Author(s):  
Si Ru Qian

After the WenChuan earthquake in may 12,2008,Many province government built the temporary houses for earthquake disaster area.For the first time, they initiate such large scale project, there are many problems emerged during the process of construction such problem like economy ,environment, engineering materials and technology. In this article, we collect problems and analysis them ,seek for the possible measures of construct the temporary house and the effective way to rebuilt the disaster area.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janosch Dlouhy ◽  
Miguel Ricalde ◽  
Bernardo Cossio ◽  
Carlos Januncio

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Henriikka Wilinger

The dissertation investigates fiction reading practices (Barton, 1994) of highly educated adult migrants. There are two contexts explored: reading in an advanced Swedish course and reading in free time. The title, Att bli en på svenska läsande människa? Flerspråkiga högutbildade vuxnas skönlitterära läspraktiker, translates to: ”Becoming a person who reads in Swedish? Fiction reading practices of highly educated multilingual adults”. The topic relates to three fields: literature education, multilingualism, and sociolinguistics. The main research questions are: Why and how do highly educated multilingual adults read literature in advanced Swedish language courses? Why, how and in which languages do highly educated multilingual adults read literature in their free time? The focus is on fiction reading practices of migrants that either study Swedish at an advanced level or have done so several years ago. The overall aim is to highlight a group of individuals who possess a great deal of cultural capital which might not always be visible in a new linguistic and cultural context (Blackledge, 2005). “Highly educated” refers to individuals with an academic degree, ongoing university studies, or a high school education with academic studies as a goal. The educational context consists of advanced Swedish courses, so called university access programs, at two universities in Sweden. This educational context is investigated by interviews with students and teachers, policy document analysis, and observations of an oral exam. The free time context is explored by deep interviews with multilinguals that have lived in Sweden for three years or more. The dissertation consists of seven chapters. Chapter 1 introduces the topic and motivates why it is important to study adult multilingualism and literature reading. The answer is quite simple: because this area has hardly ever been researched in Sweden when it comes to informants with academic backgrounds. Earlier research in this area has mainly focused on multilingual children and youth, or adults with short educational backgrounds. Chapter 2 gives an overview of previous research and theories relevant for this study. Chapter 3 is a methods chapter including a presentation of the material categories, study subjects, ethical considerations, and the analysis method, which is qualitative and empirical. The theoretic framework draws on social constructionism (Burr, 2001) and a poststructuralist understanding of multilingualism (Blackledge, 2005). Multilingualism is seen as a choice of languages, based on identity positions as presented by Pavlenko and Blackledge (2004). Because of the broad, interdisciplinary topic, several theoretical tools are applied. The literature reception perspective draws on reader-response theory by Rosenblatt (1938; 1995). When it comes to the educational context, the legitimation typology of reading literature in educational settings in Sweden, created by Persson (2007), is applied. Furthermore, McCormick’s (1994) sociocultural model explains how readers’ backgrounds affect their so called “reading forms” (Tengberg, 2011). In addition, Torell’s (2002) understanding of the concept of literary competence and Janks’ (2009) critical literacy theory are used. The analysis of language learning aspects is based on Cummins’ (1981) iceberg model and his two concepts: BICS, basic interpersonal communication skills, and CALP, cognitive and academic language proficiency. Further, a model dividing the relationship between second language learning and literature instruction into four categories (Paran, 2008) is used as a way of describing the goals and practices of the course. Felski’s (2008) four “modes of engagement” are used to understand the individuals’ personal interests when reading fiction in L2 in both contexts. When it comes to the leisure readers, the theories mentioned above are complemented with Bourdieu’s (1977) sociology and the concept of cultural capital. The dissertation consists of two empirical parts. Part I, presented in Chapter 4 and 5, focuses on literature reading in educational settings and also discusses the primary and the secondary literary socialization of the multilingual students. Chapter 4 examines the motivations of literature reading in the advanced language course, thus centering on the question word “why”. Chapter 5 examines the observations of an oral exam and group interviews with the students after the course and concentrates on the question word “how”. Part II, presented in Chapter 6, focuses on ten migrants’ reading practices today, after several years in Sweden. Deep interviews with these multilingual readers have been reconstructed as reader biographies, presented as portraits of the readers.


Pragmatics ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 205-227
Author(s):  
Chad Nilep

Ethnographic study of Hippo Family Club, a foreign language learning club in Japan with chapters elsewhere, reveals a critique of foreign language teaching in Japanese schools and in the commercial English conversation industry. Club members contrast their own learning methods, which they view as “natural language acquisition”, with the formal study of grammar, which they see as uninteresting and ineffective. Rather than evaluating either the Hippo approach to learning or the teaching methods they criticize, however, this paper considers the ways of thinking about language that club members come to share. Members view the club as a transnational organization that transcends the boundaries of the nation-state. Language learning connects the club members to a cosmopolitan world beyond the club, even before they interact with speakers of the languages they are learning. The analysis of club members’ ideologies of language and language learning illuminates not only the pragmatics of language use, but practices and outcomes of socialization and shared social structures.


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