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Integrating CALL into the classroom: the role of podcasting in an ESL listening strategies course

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 May 2007

ANNE O’BRIEN
Affiliation:
Applied Linguistics & Technology, Department of English, Iowa State University, 226 Ross Hall Ames, IA 50011, USA. aobryan@iastate edu
VOLKER HEGELHEIMER
Affiliation:
Applied Linguistics & Technology, Department of English, Iowa State University, 226 Ross Hall Ames, IA 50011, USA. volkerh@iastate edu

Abstract

Despite the increase of teacher preparation programs that emphasize the importance of training teachers to select and develop appropriate computer-assisted language learning (CALL) materials, integration of CALL into classroom settings is still frequently relegated to the use of selected CALL activities to supplement instruction or to provide additional practice. For the most part, we are still quite a way from what Bax (2003) calls the normalization stage of CALL, i.e., the stage where CALL becomes invisible and truly integrated. Podcasting, a new method of delivering on-demand audio and video files via the Web, shows promise as a technology that may allow teachers to expand the confines of their classrooms, and is becoming increasingly popular in educational contexts. Current use of podcasting in education remains, however, limited primarily to the delivery of recorded lectures in a portable, online format. We believe podcasting has the potential to not only act as a rich source of input and instruction for students in the language classroom, but also to transform instruction. Consequently, this paper describes a structured attempt to integrate CALL activities in the form of podcasts into an academic English as a Second Language (ESL) course on listening strategies. Preliminary evaluation of this ongoing project suggests that both the teacher and the students find the podcasts to be a positive component of the course.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2007 Cambridge University Press

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