Page 180 - BLENDED LEARNING
P. 180

Figure 1: How the modes complement each other



                          Face to face – lead mode  Computer mode
                            Present, practice and   Practice (controlled) and
                           extend (plus skills work)  extension activities







                          Face to face – follow-up    Self-study mode
                           Review, personalise, and   Practice (controlled) and
                                assess/test          extension activities




               Materials and software
               With regard to materials, a combination of general (Headway, Soars and Soars,
               2006 and Going for Gold, Acklam and Crace, 2003) and military English coursebooks
               (Campaign, Mellor-Clark and Baker de Altamirano, 2005 and Breakthrough, Kosalkova
               et al., 2005) were used in the face-to-face mode. Although coursebooks have been
               heavily criticised in the literature for being reductionist, bland, safe, and constrictive
               (Tomlinson cited in Toms, 2004; Brumfit cited in Sheldon 1988; Williams, 1983), in
               this blend they were chosen as a step towards ensuring standardisation in terms of
               course content across the centres, to support the relatively inexperienced officer
               instructors and to help them develop pedagogically. The criteria for selection with
               regard to the general English coursebooks at lower levels were how ‘easy’ they were
               perceived to be to teach and the quality of the teacher’s book in terms of the support
               it provided for relatively inexperienced instructors, plus the quality of the add-ons,
               for example workbook, resource packs. Availability also played an important role in
               the selection process. At higher levels the choice for the general English coursebook
               was left to the teachers and I cannot recall the criteria that they used. With regard to
               the military English coursebooks the choice was so limited that there was no call for
               extensive selection criteria.

               In the computer mode the learners worked independently with one learner to one
               computer using REWARD (Greenall, 2002) software. It was my belief that the learners
               would benefit from working individually at the computer as in a previous blend
               where they had worked in pairs, using different software, there had been a tendency
               for one student to be ‘active’ (controlling the mouse/keyboard and completing the
               exercises) whilst the other remained ‘passive’ (watching on, rarely collaborating,
               and at times even leaving the room). Therefore I was trying to prevent this in the
               revised blend. REWARD (Greenall, 2002) was chosen primarily for two reasons.
               Firstly, it only required a one-off purchase, thereby ensuring to a large extent post-
               project sustainability in terms of cost-effectiveness. (Sustainability was of paramount
               importance in the design as the UK-funded MESP had a fixed end date after which



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