Teacher role in online course and materials design
Teacher role in online course and materials design
This article examines the role of the teacher in online course and materials design for language learning. It considers the skills, competencies and knowledge required by language teachers to be effective in creating and delivering online education and reflects upon how these skills have evolved as technology has developed. Teacher competencies and knowledge have altered in response to technical developments that enable greater networked sharing, collaboration and communication across the internet. This progress has facilitated a change in understanding of how education is delivered, with a move from teacher-centred to learner-centred approaches. As a result, the teacher role has become multi-faceted and includes aspects of designer, expert curator and facilitator of learning. The article reflects upon how new technologies, such as generative artificial intelligence, might further impact the role of the teacher in creating and fostering an effective learning experience. It suggests that the Community of Inquiry framework (COI) and its notion of ‘teaching presence’ is a suitable way of contextualising and framing how the role of the teacher has adapted and can continue to adapt in a rapidly changing world of technology.
Digital education, Computer Assisted Language Learning
1-7
Borthwick, Kate
34fa2da0-35c3-4302-932c-141b94aec4b4
2 April 2025
Borthwick, Kate
34fa2da0-35c3-4302-932c-141b94aec4b4
Borthwick, Kate
(2025)
Teacher role in online course and materials design.
In,
McCallum, Lee and Tafazoli, Dara
(eds.)
The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Computer-Assisted Language Learning.
Palgrave Macmillan Cham, .
(doi:10.1007/978-3-031-51447-0_274-1).
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Book Section
Abstract
This article examines the role of the teacher in online course and materials design for language learning. It considers the skills, competencies and knowledge required by language teachers to be effective in creating and delivering online education and reflects upon how these skills have evolved as technology has developed. Teacher competencies and knowledge have altered in response to technical developments that enable greater networked sharing, collaboration and communication across the internet. This progress has facilitated a change in understanding of how education is delivered, with a move from teacher-centred to learner-centred approaches. As a result, the teacher role has become multi-faceted and includes aspects of designer, expert curator and facilitator of learning. The article reflects upon how new technologies, such as generative artificial intelligence, might further impact the role of the teacher in creating and fostering an effective learning experience. It suggests that the Community of Inquiry framework (COI) and its notion of ‘teaching presence’ is a suitable way of contextualising and framing how the role of the teacher has adapted and can continue to adapt in a rapidly changing world of technology.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 19 November 2024
Published date: 2 April 2025
Keywords:
Digital education, Computer Assisted Language Learning
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 500986
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500986
PURE UUID: 4e3d75a8-7b5b-4f23-8f25-3cc61e7314b4
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Date deposited: 20 May 2025 16:54
Last modified: 21 May 2025 01:41
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Contributors
Editor:
Lee McCallum
Editor:
Dara Tafazoli
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