Abstract

The purpose of the study was to explore how technological advances incorporated into the Philology Studies curriculum could impact the students’ research skills and the quality of their research projects and what students’ and teachers’ impressions of the reshaped research component of the curriculum were. The study used qualitative and quantitative methods with the dominance of qualitative methods. It employed the baseline study, checklist to assess students’ research papers, assessment criteria, and the Triangular Assessment Method to assess the students’ papers. The consensus meeting was held to allow the experts to express their reasoning for the scores. The semi-structured interview was administered to the students’ and teachers’ to identify their impressions of the reshaped research component of the curriculum of philology. The technological advances incorporated into Philology Studies curriculum improve the students’ research skills and the quality of their research projects. Both students and teachers appreciated the reshaped research component of the curriculum. The analytical software can be successfully incorporated in the corpus analysis-purpose student research. The students found the intervention a challenging experience that ‘pumped up’ their intellectual, research, and technical skills. They reported improvement in interpreting corpus using correlations, frequencies, distributions, and collecting information using software to organise it in a professional way. The lecturers agreed that the technology-based instructional model incorporated into Philology Studies curriculum improved both students’ research skills and the quality of their research projects.

Highlights

  • A research-led, research-oriented, research-based, and research-tutored approaches are quite commonly used as a framework for both teaching and curriculum design of pre-service training in higher education institutions (Haaker & Morgan-Brett, 2017; McLinden et al, 2015)

  • The baseline study part of the study was explorative and employed primary and secondary research methods to collect information. The objective of this phase of the study was to identify how the students majoring in Philology self-assessed their research skills, research methods awareness, and research software awareness used in philology and linguistic research

  • It was found that the instructional model based on the analytical software incorporated into Philology Studies curriculum positively influenced the students’ research skills and the quality of their research projects, in general

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Summary

Introduction

A research-led, research-oriented, research-based, and research-tutored approaches are quite commonly used as a framework for both teaching and curriculum design of pre-service training in higher education institutions (Haaker & Morgan-Brett, 2017; McLinden et al, 2015). The research is a significant component of the pre-service training of students majoring in philology and relies on the research methods employed in Linguistics (Fulk, 2016; KiliańskaPrzybyło, 2019; Litosseliti, 2018) These methods include qualitative ones such as an interview, discourse analytic approaches, and multimodal analysis which dominate over the mixed research methods such as a corpus analysis. This situation raises several issues such as the validity and precision of the students’ and university scholars’ findings in the field of philology and linguistics, research bias occurrence, and limitedness of the use of the software in processing and analysing the raw data. The research-oriented approach is suitable for the study because it is intended to develop students’ awareness and ability to utilise the appropriate research methodologies and methods within the context of a certain discipline, linguistics and philology (Reiber, 2019)

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