Abstract

<p>This study examines students’ perception of blended asynchronous and synchronous learning in an advanced L2 Spanish conversation course that took place at a major-sized public university in the Unites States as an intensive 5-week summer course during the COVID-19 pandemic. Twenty students participated in a survey, which was comprised with open-ended questions about their overall perception about the online activities and learning, in addition to 51 five-point Likert scale questions about course design, course components, instructor feedback, and peer interactions and rapport. Findings indicate that most of students perceived that they have gained proficiency in speaking, listening, reading and writing, and they felt more comfortable and confident in communicating in Spanish. The activities that students perceived more helpful than others in enhancing communication skills in Spanish were both the semi-guided synchronous, unsupervised group conversations via Zoom and the asynchronous video reports and discussions, while the small group Zoom conversation activity was also perceived as the most enjoyable. Students’ overall positive perceptions and satisfaction about this blended course were achieved through a combination of several factors, such as the clarity of the course design and instructions, the right combination of asynchronous and synchronous online activities that provided students with enriched materials to learn as well as ample opportunities to practice Spanish, the interactions and support with peers that created a sense of learning community and connectedness, and the instructor’s timely and constant feedback, rapport, and social presence to motivate students to learn. </p><p> </p><p><strong> Article visualizations:</strong></p><p><img src="/-counters-/edu_01/0994/a.php" alt="Hit counter" /></p>

Highlights

  • Online language learning or E-learning of language has been found as useful as face-toface (F2F) classes even if teaching online presents challenges of its own (Moneypenny & Aldrich, 2016; Goertler & Gacs, 2018; Gacs et al, 2020)

  • While many face-to-face L2 classes were forced to transition into synchronous classes that meet via Zoom, Microsoft Teams, and WebEx, for instance, at a set time (Ying et al, 2021), many other L2 classes were converted into asynchronous classes in which students could have more flexibility of choosing when and where to take them during the pandemic

  • Both open-ended questions and 51 Likert-scale questions revealed that the overwhelming majority of students perceived that they have gained proficiency in speaking, listening, reading and writing along with improved vocabulary and cultural knowledge, and they felt more comfortable and confident in communicating in Spanish after taking an intensive 5-week summer blended course

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Summary

Introduction

Online language learning or E-learning of language has been found as useful as face-toface (F2F) classes even if teaching online presents challenges of its own (Moneypenny & Aldrich, 2016; Goertler & Gacs, 2018; Gacs et al, 2020). Greater challenges are often encountered when teaching and learning a second language (L2) online, in which the main goal of the L2 classes is normally to enhance the level of language proficiency in listening, speaking, reading, and writing, not just delivering the content of the course Achieving such a goal in a virtual setting often requires good preparation and a great deal of time from instructors who must carefully design course content and organization that can be comparable to what students could receive in F2F classrooms. The unexpected onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020, forced many institutions around the world to swiftly switch from F2F instruction to remote (or online) instruction at the last minute (Farros et al, 2020; Liguori & Winkler, 2020; Bailey et al, 2021; Baker, 2021) This type of unplanned, crisis-prompt online teaching was often called remote teaching (Hodges et al, 2020), which, strictly speaking, can be distinguished from online teaching, which typically requires more rigorous preparation and designing of the course. As the global pandemic is still ongoing, it seems important to tackle

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