Page 40 - BLENDED LEARNING
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All in the blend
               Reports on the application of computer assisted language learning had opened
               the door to consideration of advances in e-learning applications. At FUTA, the first
               attempt was the borrowed Web 1.0 site whereby students were given access to
               online materials on HIV/AIDS for their term paper writing. The real attempt at
               applying learning technologies did not come until 2008 after a member of the
               teaching team had the opportunity, through the Commonwealth Academic Staff
               Fellowship, to attend the UK Subject Centre for Languages, Linguistics and Area
               Studies’ e-Learning symposium at Southampton University. There, a presentation
               on using the wiki opened up a new vista. Relying on elaborations of the subject by
               Beatty (2003) and Dudeney and Hockly (2007), teachers took themselves through
               several sessions of professional development to decide what they needed to know
               and do, and how to get students using the wiki (Aborisade 2009). However, by 2009
               the decision to adopt the Moodle VLE was taken as this was seen to offer a wider
               range of opportunities (https://futa.edu.ng/futaelearningdirect).

               Why blend?
               In low-resourced contexts the triple problems of inadequate classroom spaces,
               lack of teaching-learning facilities and few teachers create a complex mix of
               constraints, including timetabling. An extension of the classroom was needed.
               Learning technologies are reported to help extend teaching-learning flexibility.
               The fact that technology supported courses ‘provide better support for the less
               able, engage students who do not respond well to ‘traditional’ classroom learning,
               provide opportunity for accelerated learning for gifted and talented students, and
               develop independent learning skills through a personalised learning experience
               is well attested to’ (Boulton, 2008). Other reports (Murray, 2000) contend that
               computer-based technologies can be powerful pedagogical tools as extensions of
               human capabilities and contexts for social interactions supporting learning. Blended
               or hybrid learning (Rodriguez and Anicete, 2010) was therefore an appealing choice
               for two main reasons. First, as ‘digital immigrant’ teachers and students we get to
               keep within our comfort zone of the face-to-face mode while we learn to use the new
               tools of Web 2.0. Secondly, accounts in e-learning literature suggest that blended or
               hybrid learning has great advantages; Graham (2006) listed six: pedagogical richness,
               access to knowledge, social interaction, personal agency, cost effectiveness, and
               ease of revision. It has been found that many students preferred this mode because
               of the advantage of combining the affordances of face-to-face and online modes
               and building on their diverse learning styles (Reynard, 2007; Rodriguez and Anicete,
               2010). The blended mode enables an enhanced learning experience by enabling
               diverse learning environments, thus fostering reinforcement, increasing accessibility
               of learning materials; and helping to build a sense of community and collaboration
               through the collaborative and communication platforms of the wiki and forums for
               sharing experiences of learning.









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