Tablets for informal language learning: Student usage and attitudes

Mobile-assisted language learning (MALL), a relatively new area of CALL inquiry, is gaining more and more attention from language educators with the development of new mobile devices. Tablet computers—featuring high mobility, convenient network connectivity, and smart application extendibility—are part of a wave of the latest mobile inventions; how these new mobile devices enhance MALL and how students perceive them as a language learning tool have yet to be broadly explored. This action research project sought to investigate how students used tablet computers to learn English in informal settings outside of class and how to foster more effective usage of the tablet for independent language learning. The study shows that tablet computers are ideal tools for creating an interactive, collaborative, and ubiquitous environment for language learning, provided that the technological affordances of the device have been fully explored with the students. This investigation also reveals that students have a generally favorable attitude towards the usability, effectiveness, and satisfaction of tablet computers for MALL.

[1]  Greg Kessler,et al.  Fluency and anxiety in self-access speaking tasks: the influence of environment , 2010 .

[2]  Stephen Kemmis,et al.  The Action Research Planner: Doing Critical Participatory Action Research , 2013 .

[3]  Stephen Van Orden Using a Tablet PC in the German Classroom to Enliven Teacher Input. , 2006 .

[4]  Wei Song,et al.  Reexamining the Effectiveness of Vocabulary Learning via Mobile Phones , 2011 .

[5]  L. Elder,et al.  Using mobile phones to improve educational outcomes: An analysis of evidence from Asia , 2010 .

[6]  Dawn Bikowski,et al.  COLLABORATIVE WRITING AMONG SECOND LANGUAGE LEARNERS IN ACADEMIC WEB-BASED PROJECTS , 2012 .

[7]  Mahmoud Atiah Amer,et al.  Idiomobile for Learners of English: A Study of Learners’ Usage of a Mobile Learning Application for Learning Idioms and Collocations , 2010 .

[8]  M'hammed Abdous,et al.  MALL Technology: Use of Academic Podcasting in the Foreign Language Classroom , 2009, ReCALL.

[9]  Liwei Hsu,et al.  English as a foreign language learners’ perception of mobile assisted language learning: a cross-national study , 2013 .

[10]  Philip Hubbard Learner Training for Effective Use of CALL , 2013 .

[11]  Greg Kessler,et al.  Student-Initiated Attention to Form in Wiki-Based Collaborative Writing. , 2009 .

[12]  Yao-Ting Sung,et al.  A mobile-device-supported peer-assisted learning system for collaborative early EFL reading , 2007 .

[13]  Hayo Reinders,et al.  Twenty ideas for using mobile phones in the language classroom , 2010 .

[14]  Emrah Baki A COMPARISON OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS' ENGLISH VOCABULARY LEARNING: USING MOBILE PHONES AND FLASH CARDS , 2010 .

[15]  Chih-Kai Chang,et al.  A mobile-assisted synchronously collaborative translation–annotation system for English as a foreign language (EFL) reading comprehension , 2011 .

[16]  Lung-Hsiang Wong,et al.  Vocabulary learning by mobile-assisted authentic content creation and social meaning-making: two case studies , 2010, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[17]  Kukulska-hulmeAgnes,et al.  An overview of mobile assisted language learning , 2008 .

[18]  Mike Sharples Methods for evaluating mobile learning , 2009 .

[19]  Agnes Kukulska-Hulme,et al.  Will mobile learning change language learning? , 2009, ReCALL.

[20]  Glenn Stockwell,et al.  Using mobile phones for vocabulary activities: Examining the effect of the platform , 2010 .

[21]  Glenn Stockwell,et al.  Vocabulary on the move: Investigating an intelligent mobile phone-based vocabulary tutor , 2007 .

[22]  Deborah Mason,et al.  Doing Action Research in English Language Teaching. A Guide for Practitioners , 2010 .

[23]  Muhammet Demirbilek,et al.  Journal of Information Technology Education Investigating Attitudes of Adult Educators towards Educational Mobile Media and Games in Eight European Countries , 2022 .

[24]  Giasemi N. Vavoula A Study of Mobile Learning Practices , 2005 .

[25]  Chresteria Neutzsky-Wulff,et al.  Mobile City and Language Guides--New Links between Formal and Informal Learning Environments. , 2009 .

[26]  Rob Koper,et al.  A Study of Contextualised Mobile Information Delivery for Language Learning , 2010, J. Educ. Technol. Soc..

[27]  Patricia Thornton,et al.  Using mobile phones in English education in Japan , 2005, J. Comput. Assist. Learn..

[28]  Valsa Koshy Action Research for Improving Practice: A Practical Guide , 2005 .

[29]  Kukulska-hulmeAgnes,et al.  Will mobile learning change language learning? , 2009, ReCALL.

[30]  A. Ant Ozok,et al.  A Comparative Study Between Tablet and Laptop PCs: User Satisfaction and Preferences , 2008, Int. J. Hum. Comput. Interact..

[31]  Omur Akdemir,et al.  A Comparison of Undergraduate Students' English Vocabulary Learning: Using Mobile Phones and Flash Cards. , 2010 .

[32]  Mike Sharples,et al.  Challenges in Evaluating Mobile Learning , 2008 .

[33]  Fred D. Davis User Acceptance of Information Technology: System Characteristics, User Perceptions and Behavioral Impacts , 1993, Int. J. Man Mach. Stud..

[34]  Keith Barrs Fostering Computer-Mediated L2 Interaction beyond the Classroom , 2012 .

[35]  K. Lewin,et al.  The Action Research Planner , 2003 .

[36]  Wen-Kai Yu,et al.  When technology speaks language: an evaluation of course management systems used in a language learning context , 2010, ReCALL.

[37]  M. Prensky Digital Natives, Digital Immigrants , 2001 .