What Does It Take To Teach Online?: January 2006
What Does It Take To Teach Online?: January 2006
What Does It Take To Teach Online?: January 2006
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Tutorial CALL
This issue opens with a research article in the area of tutorial CALL, a subject
that has been unjustly neglected and unduly associated with behaviorism and
which, according to some authors, should be brought back into the mainstream
of online language learning research (see, e.g., Hubbard & Siskin, 2004). The
starting point of Jozef Colpaert’s state-of-the-art article is his critique of various
approaches to online language teaching and learning such as technology-driven
or affordances-based methods. In a truly pedagogy-based approach, he argues, a
detailed needs analysis and a definition of the method that is most suitable for this
purpose should come first.
Mirjam Hauck and Uschi Stickler 467
Colpaert’s considerations are based on a comprehensive project exploring the
potential of a “pedagogy-driven approach in research-based research-oriented
CALL system design” (p. 480) where tutors inform CALL research by giving
feedback and formulating new working hypotheses at critical points in the design
and development process of applications for online language learning. In what
he calls “dedicated CALL” (p. 479), online systems no longer shape language-
teaching methods but, rather, it is the other way round. Acknowledging that the
gap between technology and language pedagogy constitutes the main challenge
in online teaching, Colpaert advocates a 10-step pedagogy-driven design process
where teacher contributions play a pivotal role both in identifying and formulating
needs and in developing solutions. A similar attempt to bridge the gap between
technology and language pedagogy and to combine the development of both tech-
nical and pedagogical knowledge and competence in order to train ingénieurs
pédagogiques ‘pedagogical engineers’ forms the background to the research of
Mangenot and Nissen and also informs that of Lewis.
Blended Learning
If teachers, then, “can and should become contributors in CALL research,” (Col-
paert, p. 494), our next three contributions prove that they are well on their way.
Hubbard (2003) identified evaluation as one of the main gaps in CALL research.
Yet evaluation is one of the contributions that practitioners are uniquely placed to
make through their experience, through direct learner contact, and—as is the case
here—through surveys and quality assurance measures implemented as part of the
design and development process of their online language-learning modules and
courses. It is crucial that these tutors, course designers, coordinators, and so forth
not simply be satisfied with providing a good course but, instead, that they have
set in motion action research to better understand and enhance both curriculum
and tuition. From the UK, the US, and Chile, three contributions provide insights
into the online classroom.
It is no coincidence that these articles all report on projects based on “blended
learning” or “hybrid courses.” Whether for pragmatic, financial, or pedagogic rea-
sons, many institutions see blending as a solution to the practical problems of uni-
versity teaching in the 21st century. For a variety of reasons, whether to increase
access, student numbers, and the transferability of skills, or to give students a
competitive edge in a global market, many language departments have incorpo-
rated online elements in their courses. Fortunately, the days when blended courses
meant haphazardly compiled elements transferred to whatever medium happened
to be available at the time and implied convenience on the cheap have long gone.
All the examples presented here can in themselves be seen as “good practice;”
yet, in generating insights that are applicable well beyond the immediate context
of their production, these articles go well beyond “case studies” or “good practice
guides.”
In the first practitioner piece, Elena Polisca reports on how embedding a Web
-CT-based independent language-learning program (ILLP) into an existing cur-
468 CALICO Journal, Vol. 23, No. 3
riculum for learners of Italian at the University of Manchester, UK, has influenced
student motivation and the quality of the portfolios submitted for assessment.
While proving a confidence booster for weaker students and helping them remain
highly motivated throughout the course, the ILLP also allows stronger students
to push themselves to the limits of their ability. As the author shows, a decisive
element in a carefully planned ILLP is in-built reflection, not an obvious or im-
mediate favorite with students but eminently useful in the longer term process
of language learning. Empowered to intervene actively in their course via the
platform and encouraged to depart from suggested activities and move on to more
self-directed work, learners at both ends of the capability spectrum manage suc-
cessfully to become less dependent on their teacher(s). Their portfolio work tends
to be more personalized, and they seem more creative in editing online material
than those students who opt out of the program.
A similar case of blending and a study based on successful innovation born
of necessity is presented by Emily Scida and Rachel Saury of the University of
Virginia. They see their article as a contribution to the growing body of investiga-
tions focusing on how hybrid courses influence student learning and classroom
practice. Their observations are based on a small-scale comparison of student
performance in a hybrid program and in a traditional classroom. Following Little-
wood (1990), who found that using language implies having constantly to create
higher level plans in terms of ideas, meanings, and conversational strategies and
that being able to execute these plans depends on the degree of automaticity at
lower levels, they feel that such automaticity can be achieved by employing the
computer as tutor. In accordance with Felix’s call for pedagogy for the third mil-
lennium (Felix, 2005), the authors hypothesize that hybrid courses can offer the
ideal language teaching and learning scenario where an initially conservative use
of the computer for practicing vocabulary and structures allows students to carry
out higher level functions such as communication and writing.
Whereas our American authors stress the emerging importance of Spanish as
the major second or foreign language in US higher education institutions, Emerita
Bañados from the Universidad de Concepción, Chile, emphasizes the need for the
large-scale learning of English for a global market and as a valuable commodity
in the education market itself. Considerable investment is targeted towards mak-
ing this resource available to more students at a high level, and the chosen way of
achieving this is by means of blended courses. Bañados’ article “A Blended-learn-
ing Pedagogical Model for Teaching and Learning EFL Successfully Through an
Online Interactive Multimedia Environment” describes the implementation of a
blended-learning program (English Online) at the Universidad de Concepción.
She stresses the need for a multidisciplinary team of teachers, technicians, soft-
ware developers, graphic experts, and video producers to find a “common lan-
guage” (p. 541) and points out that this can require “hundreds of hours of discuss-
ing possibilities, sharing ideas, and jointly planning lessons” (p. 539). Only on
this basis can maximum benefit be drawn from the substantial talents at hand and
the creative potential available for developing a language-learning environment
that reflects the tutors’ original vision. This article, written from a practitioner’s
Mirjam Hauck and Uschi Stickler 469
perspective, sheds light on both the solutions devised at the Universidad de Con-
cepción and the steps needed to arrive at them.
The processes described in all three of the above articles call to mind that the
design of courses, for delivery wholly or partly online, continues to require large
amounts of time, energy, and finances. However, as Colpaert quoting Cooper
(1997) so pointedly reminds us: “The only thing more expensive than software is
bad software” (p. 493). That these courses are also costly in terms of maintenance
and updating and require more faculty input than face-to-face classes is a view
shared by Pauline Ernest and Joseph Hopkins based on their experience at the
Universitat Oberta de Catalunya in Spain.
Tutor Training
The third section of this issue is concerned with the training that language tutors
need when they set out to swap the classroom for the virtual world. Little has been
written specifically on the topic of the training requirements for online language
instructors, and it is hoped that every insight gained about what it is like to receive
and/or to provide training will contribute to improved staff development efforts
in the future.
Ernest and Hopkins, course coordinators of the English program at the Univer-
sitat Oberta de Catalunya, consider issues arising from the training and support
of online instructors. The context of their observations is quite different from the
other case studies featured in this special issue, given that all courses at the Uni-
versitat Oberta de Catalunya as well as course coordination activities and tutor
training and support take place predominantly online, via asynchronous CMC at
a virtual campus. This means, moreover, that students at the Universitat Oberta
de Catalunya are technoliterate by the time they start their language course. The
authors have found that in their role as course coordinators they spend a substan-
tial amount of their time on the training of colleagues and offer an overview of the
initiatives they have taken over the last 10 years to meet tutor development needs.
They identify the sharing of insights by tutors, regular opportunities for joint tu-
tor reflection, and construction of knowledge on pedagogical issues as well as the
constitution of a learning community among online teachers as critical factors in
the successful delivery of any online course. The provision of a space for “com-
munal warmth” (p. 558) where staff can share experiences, tips, and support is
regarded as essential.
Often, however, tutors are faced with having to develop their e-teaching skills
without sufficient institutional support. This problem inspired one of the most ex-
emplary “warm” spaces for training and development of online language instruc-
tors currently available, which is reported on by Teresa Almeida d’Eça and Dafne
González. They set up and run a free, annual online workshop for teachers of EFL
in particular. In “Becoming a Webhead” (BaW) language tutors equipped with
a computer, an Internet connection, and, most important, a sense of adventure,
get acquainted with various web communication tools and their potential use in
teaching. BaW relies on hands-on activities followed by shared reflection among
470 CALICO Journal, Vol. 23, No. 3
participants where “[e]ach can be learner at one time and teacher at another” (p.
575). The “high tech and high touch” (p. 578) approach to training chosen by the
course designers combines intensive hands-on learning with equally intensive hu-
man interaction. Its worldwide dimension, a nonthreatening atmosphere, and the
human element provide a “powerful mix” (p. 578) for learners with varying levels
of expertise who achieve their individual objectives collaboratively in an environ-
ment characterized by social scaffolding. This success does not come about natu-
rally. This safe place for exciting pedagogical discoveries rests on a solid peda-
gogical basis: “Planning ahead, dividing tasks, being organized, in short, working
collaboratively as a team has been the crucial factor of our e-moderation” (p.
578).
At the other end of the spectrum, what happens when novice online tutors are
left largely to their own devices is depicted very clearly in an honest and insight-
ful account by one of our colleagues at the Open University.2 Tim Lewis tells us
how he went about equipping himself with appropriate teaching skills for a mul-
timodal online environment combining audiographic conferencing and WebCT.
His starting point is the concept of teacher autonomy which, following McGrath
(2000) and Smith (2000), he sees as the capacity for “self-directed professional
development” (p. 590) and describes how he used three different instruments (i.e.,
reflection based on keeping a teaching journal and two action research methods,
observation by a ‘critical friend,’ and discussions with a group of colleagues in an
online forum) in order to systematically develop his online teaching skills. “When
Teaching is Learning” also addresses the affective dimension of learning to teach
online and the relevance of heightened teacher awareness of one’s own autonomy
as well as that of learners. Lewis concludes with a critical analysis of the chosen
tools in terms of their potential to bring about behavioral change in tutors who are
about to or have already embarked on learning how to teach online.
Collaborative Learning
These considerations are taken a step further in the article by François Mangenot
and Elke Nissen from the Université Stendhal in Grenoble, France. Theirs is the
first contribution in the fourth and final section of this special issue, which fea-
tures two articles inspired by one of the most exciting and fast-developing areas
of online language learning: collaborative learning at a distance—or telecollabo-
rative learning.
The authors set out to remedy the perceived lack of information flow between
the research areas of computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) and net-
work-based language teaching (NBLT), particularly with regard to the impact on
tutor involvement of collaborative versus noncollaborative settings. They com-
pare and contrast learning contexts designed for collaborative work with more
tutor-controlled and activity-led settings and find that although the learning plat-
form and the course might be designed to encourage learner collaboration and
reflective discussion, “just insisting on these aspects was clearly not enough” (p.
619). They see the tutor’s ability to raise learner awareness and acceptance of
Mirjam Hauck and Uschi Stickler 471
the need to develop an autonomous approach as well as new skills as pivotal for
successful CSCL and emphasize that better teacher training is required to achieve
this.
Of all the forms of NBLT, it is telecollaboration that offers the greatest oppor-
tunity for cross-cultural and cross-linguistic collaborations of language learners
(see Thorne, 2005). Robert O’Dowd at the Universidad de León in Spain and
Markus Ritter at the Universität Essen in Germany present research that is based
on their own telecollaboration projects and a comprehensive overview of other
projects in the area. They offer a taxonomy of the causes of failed communica-
tion in telecollaborative exchanges and show how problem areas at various levels
(e.g., individual and sociocultural factors) are often interrelated. Of significance,
they also take into account collaboration between teachers as well as learners and
the special case of virtual collaboration where, “contrary to other team-teaching
efforts, teachers involved in online exchanges often do not even know each other
face to face” (p. 630). Yet, they point out that their ‘inventory’ of pitfalls does not
necessarily guarantee a successful outcome to those who use online communica-
tion tools with the aim of linking language learners from all four corners of the
world. They see it rather as a reference guide, a way of making sure that areas of
conflict and misunderstanding can be systematically turned into key moments of
cultural learning for both tutors and students.
CONVERGENCE(S)
While editing this volume, new connections and possible collaborations have be-
come apparent to us: Would Spanish learners and tutors at universities in the US
not benefit from collaboration with online students of English in Chile? Would
novice tutors left to find their own training not benefit from “Becoming a Web-
head?” Would research into tutorial CALL not be enriched by the attempts of tech-
nologists, software designers and English tutors to find a “common language?”
The current volume is intended in the spirit of
1. bringing together different projects,
2. sharing reflection on experiences,
3. analyzing and discussing problems,
4. furthering a deeper understanding of what it takes to teach languages on-
line, and
5. stimulating new and more far-reaching debates.
We trust this will lead to an increased awareness of tutor needs and hope that
it will inform and enhance provision of appropriate training opportunities. We
would like to encourage those teaching online to feel free to use and adapt the ap-
proaches described in the articles for reflective practice and to communicate their
thoughts and experiences either via the CALICO mailing list (http://calico.org) or
directly to the editors.
Although the research-oriented and the practitioner-focused reports are clearly
two elements to this special issue, the division between them is not as clear cut as
we had originally envisaged. Going far beyond what Allwright (2003) has termed
472 CALICO Journal, Vol. 23, No. 3
‘exploratory practice,’ the practitioners have turned out to be truly reflective in
their various approaches. They have shown a keen interest in the ongoing evalu-
ation of their work with the aim of contributing to an existing body of knowl-
edge about best practices in online language teaching. Moreover, their findings
are relevant not only to the settings in which they work but are also more broadly
applicable. All this is achieved in often less than favorable circumstances, or, as
Ernest and Hopkins (p. 565) put it: “On a personal and professional level as online
coordinators, we still find that we have to struggle to reconcile the multifaceted
daily demands of our job with our desire to carry out much-needed research in the
field.”
Those whose primary focus is on research have shown that there is a variety of
ways to tackle the question of online pedagogy ranging from a qualitative “case
study” approach based on deep personal insights (that will reverberate with many
a new language tutor) via a theoretically based comparative study of different
teaching and learning environments and their inherent constraints and affordances
to a more general advocacy of pedagogic considerations as the basis for online
teaching. With the help of these studies, new light has been shed on what it takes
to teach online.
Online teaching takes technical know-how, content that is planned from a
pedagogic rather than a technological perspective, creative adaptation of skills
and teaching styles, training of tutors to equip them for work in an environment
where—as a result of an increasing rate of technological development—the goal-
posts are permanently shifting, and thus a willingness to change, adapt, question,
and improve constantly. Despite the hope of some administrators that online lan-
guage teaching would allow cuts in staff costs, the teacher is still very much part
of the learning context; maybe not as a “guide on the side,” and certainly not as
a “sage on the stage,” but as a (co)designer of learning situations, mediator, and
colearner in the search for information, the construction of knowledge, the devel-
opment of competences, and the creation of opportunities for real and meaningful
communication.
NOTES
1
For a current discussion of the digital divide, see van Dijk, 2005.
2
It should be noted here that Associate Lecturers or tutors employed at the Open Univer-
sity to teach online language courses do, routinely, receive training for this. The situation
for researchers and lecturers, however, is slightly different.
3
Lancelot: LANguage learning by CErtified Live Online Teachers, a European project
launched in June 2005 (or more information, see http://www.kolabora.com/experts/heike_
philp/2005/07/09/lancelot_language_learning_by.htm).
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The editors would like to thank the following individuals for their invaluable
help in reviewing contributions to this special issue: Jim Coleman, Nina Garrett,
Regine Hampel, Stella Hurd, Christopher Jones, Marie-Noëlle Lamy, Monika
Shelley, Lesley Shield, and Claire Bradin Siskin.
AUTHORS’ BIODATA
Mirjam Hauck is a Senior Lecturer and Head of German in the Department of
Languages at the Open University in the UK, where she has been involved in
investigations of multimodal virtual learning spaces for language learning and
teaching for almost a decade. She has also been responsible for the introduction
of online language tuition and tutor training in the German section. Her current
research and publications focus on the role of metacognitive knowledge and strat-
egies in the context of electronic literacy.
Dr. Ursula Stickler joined the Department of Languages at the Open University,
UK, as a Lecturer in German in 2002. She has published widely in the areas of
autonomous language learning, especially tandem learning and language advis-
ing, technology-enhanced language learning, and online teaching skills. She is
involved in the training of online tutors at the Open University.
AUTHORS’ ADDRESS
Mirjam Hauck
Dr. Ursula Stickler
Department of Languages
The Open University
Walton Hall
Milton Keynes
MK7 6AA
United Kingdom
Email: Ursula Stickler, u.stickler@open.ac.uk; Mirjam Hauck, m.hauck@open.
ac.uk
476 CALICO Journal, Vol. 23, No. 3