ZOUHAR LUDVÍKOVÁ, Lenka. Language and Non-Language Impact of Autonomy Support as Reported by the Students. In GOLA, Sabina, PIERRARD, Michel, TOPS, Evie & Van RAEMDONCK, Dan. Enseigner et apprendre les langues au XXIe siècle Méthodes alternatives et nouveaux dispositifs d'accompagnement. Brusel: Peter Lang, 2017, p. 83-106. ISBN 978-2-8076-1366-9.
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Basic information
Original name Language and Non-Language Impact of Autonomy Support as Reported by the Students
Name in Czech Jazykový a nejazykový dopad podpory autonomie v ELT v sebehodnocení studentů
Authors ZOUHAR LUDVÍKOVÁ, Lenka.
Edition Brusel, Enseigner et apprendre les langues au XXIe siècle Méthodes alternatives et nouveaux dispositifs d'accompagnement, p. 83-106, 2017.
Publisher Peter Lang
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Proceedings paper
Field of Study 50300 5.3 Education
Country of publisher Belgium
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Publication form printed version "print"
Organization unit Language Centre
ISBN 978-2-8076-1366-9
Keywords (in Czech) autonomie; učení se jazykům; metakognice; výuka jazyků; counselling
Keywords in English autonomy; language learning; metacognition; language teaching; counselling
Changed by Changed by: Mgr. Lenka Zouhar Ludvíková, Ph.D., učo 12715. Changed: 10/10/2020 21:21.
Abstract
The article introduces a course English Autonomously which attempts to do so and provides the students with a framework that supports not only their development in language skills but also in learner autonomy. Students at universities are the last chance for the institutionalized system to direct them towards life-long learning. The article introduces a course English Autonomously which attempts to do so and provides the students with a framework that supports not only their development in language skills but also in learner autonomy. The self-evaluation of students´ progress is an inevitable part of the course and it also collects interesting data for a practitioner research. The students report progress in various areas: language skills, metacognition, learning strategies or attitudes. Therefore, the evaluation form was structured and data from 187 students of four semesters of the course have been compiled. The paper further explores the most frequently reported areas of development – speaking, writing and learning strategies. These are linked to the individual components of the course according to students´ reflections. Part of the article also oversees the changes that the students perceive in the area of their attitudes. This insight into the learners´ progress shows which components of the course work best for the course itself, for the students and for the teachers too. Students at universities are the last chance for the institutionalized system to direct them towards life-long learning.
Abstract (in Czech)
The article introduces a course English Autonomously which attempts to do so and provides the students with a framework that supports not only their development in language skills but also in learner autonomy. Students at universities are the last chance for the institutionalized system to direct them towards life-long learning. The article introduces a course English Autonomously which attempts to do so and provides the students with a framework that supports not only their development in language skills but also in learner autonomy. The self-evaluation of students´ progress is an inevitable part of the course and it also collects interesting data for a practitioner research. The students report progress in various areas: language skills, metacognition, learning strategies or attitudes. Therefore, the evaluation form was structured and data from 187 students of four semesters of the course have been compiled. The paper further explores the most frequently reported areas of development – speaking, writing and learning strategies. These are linked to the individual components of the course according to students´ reflections. Part of the article also oversees the changes that the students perceive in the area of their attitudes. This insight into the learners´ progress shows which components of the course work best for the course itself, for the students and for the teachers too. Students at universities are the last chance for the institutionalized system to direct them towards life-long learning.
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