Promoting Oral Presentation Skills Through Drama-Based Tasks with an Authentic Audience: A Longitudinal Study

Author:

Lee Yow-jyy JoyceORCID,Liu Yeu-TingORCID

Abstract

AbstractDrama activities are reported to foster language learning, and may prepare learners for oral skills that mirror those used in real life. This year-long time series classroom-based quasi-experimental study followed a between-subjects design in which two classes of college EFL learners were exposed to two oral training conditions: (1) an experimental one in which drama-based training pedagogy was employed; and (2) the comparison one in which ordinary public speaking pedagogy was utilized. The experimental participants dramatized a picture book into a play, refined and rehearsed it for the classroom audience, and eventually performed it publicly as a theater production for community children. Diachronic comparisons of the participants’ oral presentation skills under the two conditions showed that a significant between-group difference began to become pronounced only after the experimental participants started to present for real-life audiences other than their classmates. This finding suggests that drama-mediated pedagogy effectively enhanced the experimental participants’ presentation performance and became more effective than the traditional approach only after a real-life audience was involved. In addition to the participants’ performance data, survey and retrospective protocols were utilized to shed light on how drama-based tasks targeting both classroom and authentic audiences influence college EFL learners’ presentation performance and their self-perceived oral presentation skills. Analysis of the survey and retrospective data indicated that the participants’ attention to three presentation skills—structure, audience adaptation and content—was significantly raised after their presentation involved a real-life audience. Based on these findings, pedagogical implications for drama for FL oral presentation instruction are discussed.

Funder

Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Education

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1. Enhancing intercultural communication skills: The impact of drama in Chinese language teaching;Language Teaching Research;2024-08-01

2. Scaffolding instruction in an EFL drama lesson: a systemic functional analysis;International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching;2024-06-21

3. Enhancing Usability and Learner Engagement: A Heuristic Evaluation of the AI-Enhanced Video Drama Maker App;2024 21st International Joint Conference on Computer Science and Software Engineering (JCSSE);2024-06-19

4. Using process drama in EFL education: A systematic literature review;Heliyon;2024-06

5. Anxiety and enjoyment in oral presentations: a mixed-method study into Chinese EFL learners’ oral presentation performance;International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching;2024-01-19

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