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Choices is asynchronous communication for postgraduate teaching students

journal contribution
posted on 2005-04-01, 00:00 authored by Patricia Henry, X Li
Most research concludes that asynchronous activities increase the amount of student participation and improve the student-centred learning atmosphere. This raised concerns when students didn’t access discussion sites as part of their postgraduate teaching of English language studies. This study focused on the perception of a group of on-campus and off-campus postgraduate TESOL students (both native and non-native speakers of English) towards two different kinds of asynchronous activities: email and online discussion. The result showed that students preferred the email to the discussion though a large majority of both NS and NNS supported the use of online discussion as a learning tool. The reasons given included time as well as privacy, which, unexpectedly, was an issue raised mostly by native speakers of English.

History

Journal

JALT CALL journal

Volume

1

Issue

1

Pagination

3 - 11

Publisher

JALT CALL SIG

Location

Nerang, Qld.

ISSN

1832-4215

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

JALT CALL SIG

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