TY - JOUR
T1 - EFL students' perceptions of learning vocabulary in a computer-supported collaborative environment
AU - Lin, Chih Cheng
AU - Chan, Hsin Jung
AU - Hsiao, Hsien Sheng
PY - 2011/4
Y1 - 2011/4
N2 - The present study was intended to explore EFL students' perceptions of learning vocabulary collaboratively with computers. We recruited 91 eighth-graders from three intact classes in a junior high school in Taiwan, assigning one class to learning individually without computers, another learning collaboratively without computers and the other learning collaboratively with computers. All participants took a pretest before three sets of vocabulary exercises in three periods; after each set, they took an immediate posttest; and, a month after the experiment, all took a delayed posttest. The computer group also completed a questionnaire and six students were interviewed. The quantitative data showed that students, learning collaboratively with computers, were not outperformed in vocabulary tests designed for individual study; however, they showed better retention, outperforming the others in the delayed posttest. From the qualitative data, more than 70% of the participants in the computer group reported a positive attitude and anticipation to learning vocabulary in such an environment. A further analysis found the nature of tasks, sharing of computers and grouping effective to their approaches to learning. Finally this study agrees that success is not guaranteed but deliberate design needs to be considered before learners are engaged in a computer-supported collaborative learning environment.
AB - The present study was intended to explore EFL students' perceptions of learning vocabulary collaboratively with computers. We recruited 91 eighth-graders from three intact classes in a junior high school in Taiwan, assigning one class to learning individually without computers, another learning collaboratively without computers and the other learning collaboratively with computers. All participants took a pretest before three sets of vocabulary exercises in three periods; after each set, they took an immediate posttest; and, a month after the experiment, all took a delayed posttest. The computer group also completed a questionnaire and six students were interviewed. The quantitative data showed that students, learning collaboratively with computers, were not outperformed in vocabulary tests designed for individual study; however, they showed better retention, outperforming the others in the delayed posttest. From the qualitative data, more than 70% of the participants in the computer group reported a positive attitude and anticipation to learning vocabulary in such an environment. A further analysis found the nature of tasks, sharing of computers and grouping effective to their approaches to learning. Finally this study agrees that success is not guaranteed but deliberate design needs to be considered before learners are engaged in a computer-supported collaborative learning environment.
KW - Computer-supported collaborative learning
KW - English vocabulary learning
KW - Learner perception
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=79955154180&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=79955154180&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:79955154180
SN - 1303-6521
VL - 10
SP - 91
EP - 99
JO - Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology
JF - Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology
IS - 2
ER -