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Internet – links and WebQuests:
          Some elements did not exist in the face-to-face course as it was originally
          designed. Students are faced with a window of opportunities on the internet and
          they are encouraged to look at it to enlarge their content or communication skills
          knowledge. This blend has incorporated and carefully selected links and inquiry
          oriented tasks. One example of this is the Brain Quest, which is based on the idea of
          WebQuests coined in ELT as TalenQuest. (Koenraad and Westhoff, 2003). These are
          student inquiry guided tasks in groups (usually four). Each member of the group is
          responsible for one of the topics in the site and learning happens collaboratively.

          Future innovations – growth
          Possible expansions of the blend for this course suggest tandem learning as
          exchange projects with other institutions. This experience is in a pilot project phase
          at the moment (see a compilation of pilot project unedited student material at http://
          youtu.be/Qg0d67lE1Do) and I have seen up to now that it could provide a new kind
          of socialisation in the blend, and would incorporate elements of intercultural learning
          in a more vivid way. Also, since students demand the use of the blend in their next
          levels, this process has expanded to other levels of the English programme, with
          successful results. In addition, the blend has become appealing to other languages
          in the Department and I have started a training course on how to implement blended
          learning in foreign language classes such as French, Italian, Japanese and Chinese.

          Lessons learned, key elements, and advice
          While this project was in process, during and after its implementation important
          issues came to light. To carry out this blend the following elements needed to be
          considered: analysis, process, integration, innovation, improvement, material design,
          and research. These elements can be summarised in the following tenets:
          ■ ■ Use an existing face-to-face course as the basis for the blend.
          ■ ■ Use the context (campus limitations, infrastructure) to promote the use of
            blended learning.

          ■ ■ Sell administrative requests as needs and desires of instructors.
          ■ ■ Begin with instructors that are willing, even if they are not technology oriented.
          ■ ■ Instructors will learn to love technology, but this is a process.
          ■ ■ Relax! Instructors will improve their ICT literacy on the way.
          ■ ■ Instructor training in the blend is also an ongoing process and depends directly
            on instructor turnover in the institution.
          ■ ■ Trained instructors will help you promote the blended learning idea to other courses.
          ■ ■ Students and instructors will change the roles they have in a face-to-face classroom.
          ■ ■ A large-scale project is achieved step-by-step; therefore clear goals per year
            are necessary.

          ■ ■ Blended learning needs to be seen as an ongoing and gradual process in which
            the course evolves. It is not a final product.



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