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This volume provides foreign language educators and classroom
researchers with an introduction to online intercultural exchange,
the activity of engaging foreign language learners in collaborative
project work with partners from other cultures through the use of
online communication tools such as email, discussion boards and
videoconferencing. The authors use their extensive experience in
both the practice and research of online exchange to present a
clear overview of the pedagogical theory behind online exchange and
its contribution to different aspects of foreign language learning,
including communicative competence, intercultural awareness and
learner autonomy. The chapters look at different ways of organising
such projects, such as the Tandem and Cultura models, and also
provide clear discussions on practical aspects of the area
including task design, the choice of communication tools and the
role of the teacher.
This volume introduces Virtual Exchange (VE) as an innovative form
of online intercultural learning and investigates the myriad of
ways VE is being carried out across universities, ultimately
arguing for its integration into university internationalisation
policies and course curricula. Against the backdrop of increased
digitalisation initiatives throughout universities given the
effects of the pandemic, chapters focus not only on providing new
research findings, but also on providing a comprehensive
introduction and argumentation for the use of VE in university
education and also in demonstrating how it can be put into use by
both university decision-makers and educators. Reviewing the
limitations of the activity, this timely work also fundamentally
posits how VE and blended mobility more broadly could be developed
in future higher education initiatives. This book will be of
interest to researchers, academics, scholars, and students involved
with Open & Distance Education and eLearning, approaches to
internationalisation in education, and the study of higher
education more broadly. Those interested in innovative methods for
teaching and learning, as well as educational research, will also
benefit from this volume.
This volume introduces Virtual Exchange (VE) as an innovative form
of online intercultural learning and investigates the myriad of
ways VE is being carried out across universities, ultimately
arguing for its integration into university internationalisation
policies and course curricula. Against the backdrop of increased
digitalisation initiatives throughout universities given the
effects of the pandemic, chapters focus not only on providing new
research findings, but also on providing a comprehensive
introduction and argumentation for the use of VE in university
education and also in demonstrating how it can be put into use by
both university decision-makers and educators. Reviewing the
limitations of the activity, this timely work also fundamentally
posits how VE and blended mobility more broadly could be developed
in future higher education initiatives. This book will be of
interest to researchers, academics, scholars, and students involved
with Open & Distance Education and eLearning, approaches to
internationalisation in education, and the study of higher
education more broadly. Those interested in innovative methods for
teaching and learning, as well as educational research, will also
benefit from this volume.
This book provides a nexus between research and practice through
teachers' narratives of their experiences with telecollaboration.
The book begins with a chapter outlining the pedagogical and
theoretical underpinnings of telecollaboration (also known as
Virtual Exchange), followed by eight chapters that explain
telecollaborative project design, materials and activities as well
as frank discussions of obstacles met and resolved during the
project implementation. The projects described in the volume serve
as excellent examples for any teacher or education stakeholder
interested in setting up their own telecollaborative exchange.
This volume provides a state of the art overview of Online
Intercultural Exchange (OIE) in university education and
demonstrates how educators can use OIE to address current
challenges in university contexts such as internationalisation,
virtual mobility and intercultural foreign language education.
Since the 1990s, educators have been using virtual interaction to
bring their classes into contact with geographically distant
partner classes to create opportunities for authentic
communication, meaningful collaboration and first-hand experience
of working and learning with partners from other cultural
backgrounds. Online exchange projects of this nature can contribute
to the development of learner autonomy, linguistic accuracy,
intercultural awareness, intercultural skills and electronic
literacies. Online Intercultural Exchange has now reached a stage
where it is moving beyond individual classroom initiatives and is
assuming a role as a major tool for internationalization,
intercultural development and virtual mobility in universities
around the globe. This volume reports qualitative and quantitative
findings on the impact of OIE on universities in Europe and
elsewhere and offers comprehensive guidance on using OIE at both
pedagogical and technological levels. It provides
theoretically-informed accounts of Online Intercultural Exchanges
which will relevant to researchers in Computer Assisted Language
Learning, Computer-Mediated Communication, or Virtual Education.
Finally, contributors offer a collection of practitioner-authored
and practically-oriented case studies for the benefit of teachers
of foreign languages or in other subject areas who wish to engage
in developing the digital literacy and intercultural competences of
their learners.
This volume provides foreign language educators and classroom
researchers with an introduction to online intercultural exchange,
the activity of engaging foreign language learners in collaborative
project work with partners from other cultures through the use of
online communication tools such as email, discussion boards and
videoconferencing. The authors use their extensive experience in
both the practice and research of online exchange to present a
clear overview of the pedagogical theory behind online exchange and
its contribution to different aspects of foreign language learning,
including communicative competence, intercultural awareness and
learner autonomy. The chapters look at different ways of organising
such projects, such as the Tandem and Cultura models, and also
provide clear discussions on practical aspects of the area
including task design, the choice of communication tools and the
role of the teacher.
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