1. E-learning and Language and Style in Lancaster.
- Author
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Short, Mick
- Subjects
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ENGLISH language , *LINGUISTICS , *INTERNET in education , *RATING of students , *STUDENT teaching , *SEMINARS - Abstract
This article reports on research conducted in the department of Linguistics and English Language at Lancaster University from 2002 to 2005 on first-year undergraduate student performance in, and reaction to, a web-based introductory course in stylistic analysis. The main focus of this report is a comparison of student responses to the varying ways in which the web-based course was used from year to year. The description of student responses is based on an analysis of end-of-course questionnaires and a comparison of exit grades. In 2002-3, students accessed the first two-thirds of the course in web-based form and the last third through more traditional teaching. In 2003-4 the entire course was accessed in web-based form, and in 2004-5 web-based course workshops were used as part of a combined package which also involved weekly lectures and seminars. Some comparison is also made with student performance in, and responses to, the traditional lecture + seminar form of the course, as typified in the 2001-2 version of the course. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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