Collaborative iterations
These are iterations of the process which resulted in sequential instances of a CALL
program.
Challenge
Impact
Response
Lack of technical skills,
establishing a ‘team’
Costs prohibitive
Do it ourselves with
minimal technology,
capacity building
Evaluation
–
direct
questioning, survey, etc
not appropriate way to
give and receive
information
How then to get data?
My observations and
recordings about how
people were engaged
Oral data
Previous experience with
linguists, academics
Outsider language workers
not listening or recording
cultural language
Time, listening, being a
resource, collaboration
My unfamiliarity with
language
Difficult to comprehend
pedagogical needs of
language and therefore to
design activities
Researcher worked with
speakers in oral mode and
linguist in CSL mode to
learn language and
linguistic features
-28-
2014 CALL Conference
LINGUAPOLIS
www.antwerpcall.be
Language
I couldn’t communicate
well with speakers to get
content (Aboriginal
English)
Work with intermediaries
who have language in
common
Participation
Theoretical basis was
situated design and
participatory (Cárdenas-
Claros & Gruba, 2009) or
user (Carr-Chellman,
2007) design, and DBR
itself couldn’t be achieved
without participation
Time, building
relationships, fishing,
yarning, workshops on
country
Number of active speakers
- only one available to do
all the work
Stress on speaker to do all
work; no work if speaker
indisposed
No cohort of active
speakers for learners to
experience authentic
learning activities (Ozverir
& Herrington, 2011)
Used some existing
resources as compiled by
linguists
No synchronous activities
possible
Cultural representations
Existing stock images not
appropriate to culture
Time, skills, equipment,
distance, costs
Bought cameras and
laptops for participants
Oral language - CALL
pedagogy for written
languages i.e. Western
approach to CALL
pedagogy
–
SLA and
linguistic features
underlying
Not relevant to oral
language because of
reliance on linguistic
features and literacy
Work on new pedagogy
starting with oral work,
not literacy assumptions
like alphabet, orthography,
vocabulary, wordlists
Started with oral language
recordings and worked
backwards in design
Speech recognition needs
to be developed
Collecting data
Couldn’t use interviews,
questionnaires, surveys as
these are culturally
inappropriate ways of
collecting information.
Reliance on yarning,
conversations, design
artefacts, photos of
whiteboards, etc. and
memory >> journal
No specific data points in
the cycles
There are two challenges addressed here. Firstly is that of collecting and recording data
in this context, where interviews, direct questioning and surveys are an inappropriate
way of obtaining information; where filming workshops or yarning (Bessarab & Ng'andu,
2010), conversation (Kovach, 2010) and just hanging around are the only ways of
collecting data in a valid way.
-29-
2014 CALL Conference
LINGUAPOLIS
www.antwerpcall.be
Secondly, the need for a new pedagogy which could be operationalised in a CALL
program, and which respected the oral-ness of the language and the way it has been
taught and learned for millennia. In this case, we worked backwards from the spoken
recordings and in some cases never actually made complete or accurate transcriptions or
translations. The outcome is a call for a rethinking of the pedagogy in CALL for oral
languages, and a need for development of speech recognition services to incorporate in
the programs.
Refine design Principles
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