Beyond the avatar: Using video cameras to achieve effective collaboration in an online second language classroom

Author:

Pavlov Vladimir, ,Smirnova Natalia,Nuzhaia Ekaterina, ,

Abstract

In language learning, students learn through interaction with the teacher, the other students, and with the study material, to build language skills. What happens to interaction opportunities when learning goes online? In an online classroom, collaboration is difficult to achieve due to lack of physical proximity among the participants. This paper explores the problem of online collaboration between teachers and students in English as Foreign Language (EFL) classroom with the empirical focus on the role that video cameras play in online collaboration. We argue that cameras, although being contested as a pedagogical tool, should be seen as an important ‘proximity tool’ that helps foster collaboration by bringing learners and teachers ‘closer’. We theorise ‘collaboration’ via the social constructivism lens and argue that collaboration as being ‘close’ echoes in the digital sense with ‘being with’ and is core for developing an ecology of virtual collaboration. We draw on the online survey data from foreign language students and language instructors in one Russian research-intensive university, who were asked how they use cameras online. Quantitative and qualitative methods of data analysis have been used to identify key patterns and emerging themes. The key findings of the study are that 1) cameras could be an important aspect of fostering collaboration online; 2) there is a tension in relationships between students, teachers, and study materials; 3) students and teachers differently perceive the need to use cameras, which may limit opportunities for online collaboration; and 4) while students feel more comfortable when all the other participants turn their cameras on, many do not see turning cameras on for themselves to be important. The paper concludes with a discussion of how camera use can foster online collaboration between teachers and students.

Publisher

Office of the Academic Executive Director, University of Tasmania

Subject

Education

Cited by 6 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Understanding the roles of video cameras in online English courses: A qualitative inquiry into students and foreign lecturers’ conceptions;E-Learning and Digital Media;2024-03-12

2. Evaluation of Students’ Performance with Facial Capture Avatars in Online English Instruction;Communications in Computer and Information Science;2024

3. The research on the self-regulation strategies support for virtual interaction;Multimedia Tools and Applications;2023-11-03

4. Helping and Being Helped: Exploring the Motivations and Barriers to Upstream Reciprocity in Open-World Games;International Journal of Human–Computer Interaction;2023-08-09

5. Hybrid Learning During Post-Pandemic Era: Challenges and Way forward Nurturing Students' Creativity.;Reimagining Education - The Role of E-learning, Creativity, and Technology in the Post-pandemic Era [Working Title];2023-06-28

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