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What is Network-Based Language Teaching (NBLT)

Handbook of Research on E-Learning Methodologies for Language Acquisition
NBLT involves teaching languages through the use of computers that are connected to one another in either local or global networks. NBLT allows students to interact with speakers of the target language without having to physically meet with them. In NBLT, the main focus is on authentic communication via the computer and the Internet. Social software offers new opportunities for NBLT.
Published in Chapter:
Social Software and Language Acquisition
Sarah Guth (Università degli studi di Padova, Italy) and Corrado Petrucco (Università degli studi di Padova, Italy)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-994-6.ch026
Abstract
This chapter describes how the social software tools that characterize Web 2.0, such as wikis and blogs, can be used as a valid substitute for more traditional Learning Management Systems in the context of e-learning and blended learning language courses. First, we will give a brief overview of how the educational arena is changing and the role social software can play in promoting these changes. Then we will describe two experimental courses carried out at the University of Padova using social software. The chapter ends with a discussion of the role of these tools in formal education. The aim of the chapter is to show how these tools allow language educators to take network-based language teaching beyond the limits of planned classroom activities, offering students new opportunities to access and produce real language in real situations.
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