scholarly journals Research on the Online Teaching Mode of Chinese Characters as a Foreign Language Based on the Character-based Theory

Author(s):  
Sun Man ◽  
Qi Juanli
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 3076-3086
Author(s):  
Zhang Shuili ◽  
Zhao Yi ◽  
Zheng Kexin ◽  
Zhang Jun ◽  
Zheng Fuchun

Objectives: In view of the characteristics of online teaching during the coronavirus pandemic and the importance of practical teaching in training students’ skills in the process of graduate education, this paper proposes an online scene teaching mode that takes projects as the carrier and integrates with deep learning. In order to meet the demand for information and communication engineering professionals in the big data context, the whole teaching process is divided into four stages: Topic selection, Teaching project setting, online teaching interaction and teaching evaluation. In the teaching process of Python Data Analysis Foundations, the project “establishment process of tobacco picking decision tree based on information gain” is taken as the teaching case. Prior knowledge and references are pushed through the cloud platform before class, and The scene of tobacco picking affected by the weather is set in the online classroom to guide students to seek solutions to problems, and the results are presented with graphics to assist students to summarize, and then reset the scene to promote knowledge transfer, so as to integrate deep learning into the teaching process, and modify the corresponding stages according to the teaching evaluation results. The content of the scene is gradually increased from easy to difficult, from simple to complex, and from least to most, gradually increasing the difficulty, which enhances students’ learning interest and sense of achievement. Meanwhile, students’ initiative to participate in curriculum research further strengthens the effectiveness of the course in serving scientific research, which has a certain value of popularization and application.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marija Raković ◽  

The paper deals with the observation of the specifics of online teaching of lexicology and syntax of the Serbian language at the Faculty of Philology of students studying a foreign language. The aim is to notice possibilities of realization of online teaching. The research was conducted on the basis of the implementation of the teaching process in the subject Serbian language 2 (lexicology and syntax) and a survey of students on the advantages and disadvantages of online teaching. The analysis showed that online teaching provides shortcomings in the form of insufficient time for the teacher to deal in more detail with student ambiguities, but also provides numerous opportunities for progress in education – mostly in terms of student time organization and uninterrupted questioning, which is not always the case. Based on the obtained results, we will try to give methodological implications for teaching practice, which concern the possibility of improving online teaching of the Serbian language at the university level.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-6
Author(s):  
Vasumathi BADRINATHAN

Provoked in March 2020 by the global Covid 19 pandemic, the migration of education to virtual has not been without challenges. Like many other countries, India has been forced to implement virtual modalities in education as a response to the crisis. This study highlights the complex nature of EFL teaching and learning, the pedagogical and emotional difficulties caused by digital technology. It also sets out some recommendations for making better use of the virtual. Semi-directed interviews with teachers help us to identify the new situation, their perception of this change, and their strategies. They also allow us to identify the specificities of online teaching and learning of French as a foreign language.


2016 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-33 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cvetanka Walter

This study seeks an understanding of how tutors perceived the online part of a blended learning course in the context of teaching English as a foreign language at a German university. To gain knowledge about the ways in which the tutors experienced the phenomenon, a phenomenographic methodological framework was employed. Identified were four different ways of conceiving the online course as: A) a one-way street of communication: to provide students with extra materials to practice individually and for asynchronous communication, B) an add-on to on-campus classes; C) a distant relationship between students and online tutors; and D) an opportunity for tutor's professional development and team communication. The phenomenographic approach allowed to reveal variations of tutors' perceptions of teaching online with a view of enhancing the university curriculum. The findings may have implications for university teachers and educational designers.


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