Page 220 - BLENDED LEARNING
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In July 2011, teachers and participants were interviewed for a Macmillan Case Study
               used for marketing purposes. The following statements of teachers and learners
               have been taken from this case study. When asked about the advantages of using
               MEC in the classroom, Dana, a teacher of intensive classes, says: ‘It’s definitely more
               interesting. You know, sometimes you forget about the chore of having to learn a
               language or teach a lesson because you work with something new and you focus
               on it. I think this is the same for the students: when they play a game they forget
               about learning structures.’
               Learners appreciate:
               ■ ■ Independent access (89 per cent).

               ■ ■ 24/7 access to engaging L2 exercises (95 per cent).
               ■ ■ Automatic marking, encourages them to re-do exercises (78 per cent).
               ■ ■ Extra practice (95 per cent).
               ■ ■ Playing language games (32 per cent).
               ■ ■ Listening and pronunciation activities (73 per cent).
               When asked their opinion, an elementary level learner in an intensive class that uses
               MEC during the lessons said: ‘I can make the very good exercises, and after the
               exercises are coming all these answers and I can correct my own answers and think
               about what I make wrong.’
               Another elementary level student pointed out: ‘It’s very important for me to do some
               English exercises at home and to know if I have done it right or false. So for someone
               that say me ‘You have maybe 80 or 90 per cent right’ is important for me.’

               Students like listening, grammar and pronunciation exercises and emphasise the fact
               that MEC is ‘modern and very useful’. Their opinions underline the results of recent
               studies in the field of language learning review. ‘The overall finding of the meta-
               analysis is that classes with online learning (whether taught completely online or
               blended) on average produce stronger student learning outcomes than do classes
               with solely face-to-face instruction’ (US Department of Education, Office of Planning,
               Evaluation, and Policy Development (2009: 18).
               The crucial factors in the successful implementation of a VLE – sufficient training for
               teachers and participants, administrative and pedagogical support, integration into
               the syllabus – have proved advantageous for the successful implementation of MEC
               (see also Bax, 2003: 26).
               Because of the ability of students to self-pace and keep in touch with the class even
               when away on business, the chances for learners in blended learning classrooms of
               completing their course are higher.

               Although overall acceptance is high, there is a slight difference between learners
               of the two scenarios. The degree of acceptance of MEC as an integral part of their
               learning process is slightly higher with learners in intensive courses than with those




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