Book Chapters
Examining primary students’ after-class vocabulary behavioural learning patterns in user-generated learning context: A case study
- Examining primary students’ after-class vocabulary behavioural learning patterns in user-generated learning context: A case study
- ICCE 2020 - 28th International Conference on Computers in Education Conference proceedings
- Taoyuan County
- Asia-Pacific Society for Computers in Education
- 2020
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Primary Education
- In this paper, we explored the primary students' after-class vocabulary behavioural learning patterns using a mobile user-generated-content (m-UGC) tool. A total number of 21 Grade 4 students from an elementary school in Hong Kong were recruited. Case study approach was adopted. Data collection included students' learning logs on the m-UGC tool. Content analysis and visualization were used to analyze data. Three sub-groups of primary students' after-class vocabulary behavioural learning patterns were identified and future studies were explored. Copyright © ICCE 2020 - 28th International Conference on Computers in Education, Proceedings. All rights reserved.
-
- English
- Book Chapters
-
- 9789869721455
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/bibs/11f6a170
- 2021-06-15
Recent Book Chapters
Barriers to entry as barriers to identity: Short stories of the struggles of ethnic minority English language teachers to enter teaching in Hong KongBook Chapters
Creating pathways for cultural inclusion: Informal learning and teacher education in Hong KongBook Chapters
A philosophical approach to teacher educationBook Chapters
A study on social interactions among primary students in English vocabulary acquisition in a mobile learner-generated content learning environmentBook Chapters
Teacher education in a postcolonial Hong Kong: Forms, drivers, influences, and agencyBook Chapters
Melancholy in narratives of early career English teachers in Hong KongBook Chapters
A corpus-based approach to learning and teaching CantoneseBook Chapters
Translanguaging and trans-semiotising in a public relations writing course: Exploring heteroglossic co-becoming in a higher education institute in Hong KongBook Chapters