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The influence of emergency remote teaching on K-12 world language instruction
Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
- Kissau, Scott (Author)
- Davin, Kristin (Author)
- Ade-Thurow, Benjamin (Author)
- Haudeck, Helga (Author)
- Price, Laura (Author)
Title
The influence of emergency remote teaching on K-12 world language instruction
Abstract
The abrupt shift to online instruction that occurred in spring 2020, often referred to as emergency remote teaching (ERT), caught many world language educators off guard. To prepare for future disruptions to face-to-face learning and illustrate promising online teaching practices that emerged during this extended period of time that could serve to expand and enhance world language instruction, it is important to understand how ERT influenced K-12 world language programs around the world. To help the world language teaching community better understand how ERT influenced world language instruction, a team of researchers collected interview data from world language teachers and students in the United States and Germany. Results confirmed that instruction was negatively impacted by the sudden shift to online formats, explained how and why instruction was influenced, and identified promising practices exhibited by teachers to mitigate the negative impact of ERT. World language teachers, stakeholders, and school leaders may wish to consider the results of this study to lessen the impact of future disruptions to on campus learning and to enhance the growing presence of online learning in schools.
Publication
NECTFL Review
Date
2024/00/00
Language
en
ISSN
2164-5965
Accessed
16/06/2025, 12:07
Library Catalogue
ERIC
Extra
Publisher: Northeast Conference on the Teaching of Foreign Languages
ERIC Number: EJ1418130
Citation
Kissau, S., Davin, K., Ade-Thurow, B., Haudeck, H., & Price, L. (2024). The influence of emergency remote teaching on K-12 world language instruction. NECTFL Review. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ1418130
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