Building Student Interactions Outside the Classroom: Utilizing a Web-Based Application in a University Flipped Learning Course for EFL Learners

This research project developed a web-based application to facilitate out-of-class collaborative learning; the aim was to transform a student culture that facilitated very little independent study outside the classroom and classroom learning that treated students mainly as passive participants. Addi...

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Published inLearning and Collaboration Technologies. Designing, Developing and Deploying Learning Experiences Vol. 12205; pp. 326 - 338
Main Authors Ishikawa, Yasushige, Tsubota, Yasushi, Umemoto, Takatoyo, Murakami, Masayuki, Kondo, Mutsumi, Suto, Ayako, Nishiyama, Koichi
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Springer International Publishing AG 2020
Springer International Publishing
SeriesLecture Notes in Computer Science
Subjects
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Summary:This research project developed a web-based application to facilitate out-of-class collaborative learning; the aim was to transform a student culture that facilitated very little independent study outside the classroom and classroom learning that treated students mainly as passive participants. Additionally, an innovative flipped learning course utilizing this web-based application was implemented in order to integrate online and in-class collaborative learning. We hypothesized that students’ online collaborative learning could be activated and sustained throughout the semester. Based on pre- and post-questionnaire results, it was apparent that the students actively participated in discussions outside class (Active Learning (AL): p < .10, AL externalization: p < .05). Furthermore, Spearman’s rank correlation analysis for the frequency of category appearances and the indicators for social and cognitive presences, which was guided by the Community of Inquiry framework with regard to out-of-class student interactions and the pre- and post-questionnaire gains revealed that the cognitive presence was strongly correlated with the pre- and post-questionnaire gains (p < .001). These results indicate that the web-based application developed in this study supported out-of-class student collaboration.
ISBN:303050512X
9783030505127
ISSN:0302-9743
1611-3349
DOI:10.1007/978-3-030-50513-4_25