Abstract

The ORCIT project (Online Resources for Conference Interpreter Training) was launched in September 2010 and is currently in its sixth successive year. ORCIT is a multilingual and interactive learning resource with a designated website (www.orcit.eu) which offers pedagogical best practice in interpreter training. Focus of the modular resources is on six main competences necessary for successful training: listening and analysis; mastery of the mother tongue and public speaking; early and advanced consecutive interpreting; early and advanced simultaneous and research skills. In ORCIT, we are near the stage where the corpus of material is substantial enough to subject it to empirical evaluation. Extra funding is currently being sought to launch evaluation in October 2016. By definition, in any learning environment, including a technology-enhanced environment, the overall goal for both the student and the teacher is to expand and consolidate the student’s knowledge of the subject and to improve performance. Therefore the aim of an evaluation of ORCIT would be to assess the use of the resources in a blended learning environment. A proposed theoretical framework which could provide a suitable platform for an experimental design is Diana Laurillard’s the Conversational Framework and a classification of five media forms (Laurillard 1993 & 2002). Relevance of the Conversational Framework and five media forms to ORCIT are the subject of the discussion in this paper. The focus is on the media forms which would assist in the evaluation design.

Highlights

  • TECHNOLOGY ENHANCED LEARNING AND OPEN EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES (OERs)In September 2013 the European Commission launched its initiative ‘Opening up Education through New Technologies’ (European Commission, 2013 [1])

  • The proponents of open access education argue that Opens Educational Resources (OERs) and Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) can loosen the grip of this “Iron Triangle” improving quality of higher education at lower costs and stimulating innovation in universities

  • Some inspiration came from the proliferation of authoring tools in the 1990s, and exciting projects were launched in the UK at the University of Hull, to address interpreter training pedagogy

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Summary

Svetlana Carsten

The ORCIT project (Online Resources for Conference Interpreter Training) was launched in September 2010 and is currently in its sixth successive year. ORCIT is a multilingual and interactive learning resource with a designated website (www.orcit.eu) which offers pedagogical best practice in interpreter training. Focus of the modular resources is on six main competences necessary for successful training: listening and analysis; mastery of the mother tongue and public speaking; early and advanced consecutive interpreting; early and advanced simultaneous and research skills. A proposed theoretical framework which could provide a suitable platform for an experimental design is Diana Laurillard’s the Conversational Framework and a classification of five media forms (Laurillard 1993 & 2002). Relevance of the Conversational Framework and five media forms to ORCIT are the subject of the discussion in this paper. The focus is on the media forms which would assist in the evaluation design

BACKGROUND
Mapping a Theoretical Framework for ORCIT
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK FOR ORCIT
FIVE PRINCIPAL MEDIA FORMS AND THEIR RELEVANCE TO ORCIT
Media forms Narrative Interactive Communicative Adaptive Productive
CONCLUSION
ORCIT IŠTEKLIŲ VERTINIMO METODIKOS TEORINIS MODELIS

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