EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING

The paper reports a small-scale exploratory research into the potential of Facebook for blended learning. It sets out to find answers to two research objectives: (1) ) identify the learners' opinions about the use of Facebook as a means of learning reading and job interview in English, and (2)...

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Main Author: Patrisius Istiarto Djiwandono
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Soegijapranata Catholic University 2016-01-01
Series:Celt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.unika.ac.id/index.php/celt/article/view/411
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spelling doaj-c3f52a06788243fc866b75afb042c6da2020-11-24T23:24:37ZengSoegijapranata Catholic UniversityCelt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature1412-33202502-49142016-01-01151153010.24167/celt.v15i1.411359EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNINGPatrisius Istiarto Djiwandono0English Letters Department, Faculty of Language and Arts, Machung University, MalangThe paper reports a small-scale exploratory research into the potential of Facebook for blended learning. It sets out to find answers to two research objectives: (1) ) identify the learners' opinions about the use of Facebook as a means of learning reading and job interview in English, and (2) determine the effect', of blended learning on the learners' mastery of new vocabulary. Twenty-five freshmen students of class 2008 who were taking English class at Ma Chung University were taken as the respondents. After a pre-test was administered to them to identity their initial vocabulary mastery, an online task was assigned to them. The task required them to learn interview techniques, upload their own interview session, and read texts. A face to face interaction followed to deal with difficulties and clarify some issues. A post-test measuring their vocabulary growth and questionnaires to identify their opinions were then given at the end of the experiment. The result shows that while gaining significantly higher mastery of new words, the learners expressed different opinions on the use of Facebook as a means of blended learning. The majority felt that face-to-face interaction still needs to accompany the online session to clear up some difficulties and misunderstanding during the online session, while a few others opted for exclusively online session because of its efficiency and higher participation rate by passive learners.http://journal.unika.ac.id/index.php/celt/article/view/411Facebook, blended learning, vocabulary mastery, face-to-face interaction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrisius Istiarto Djiwandono
spellingShingle Patrisius Istiarto Djiwandono
EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING
Celt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature
Facebook, blended learning, vocabulary mastery, face-to-face interaction
author_facet Patrisius Istiarto Djiwandono
author_sort Patrisius Istiarto Djiwandono
title EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING
title_short EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING
title_full EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING
title_fullStr EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING
title_full_unstemmed EXPLORING THE POTENTIAL OF FACEBOOK FOR BLENDED LEARNING
title_sort exploring the potential of facebook for blended learning
publisher Soegijapranata Catholic University
series Celt: A Journal of Culture, English Language Teaching & Literature
issn 1412-3320
2502-4914
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The paper reports a small-scale exploratory research into the potential of Facebook for blended learning. It sets out to find answers to two research objectives: (1) ) identify the learners' opinions about the use of Facebook as a means of learning reading and job interview in English, and (2) determine the effect', of blended learning on the learners' mastery of new vocabulary. Twenty-five freshmen students of class 2008 who were taking English class at Ma Chung University were taken as the respondents. After a pre-test was administered to them to identity their initial vocabulary mastery, an online task was assigned to them. The task required them to learn interview techniques, upload their own interview session, and read texts. A face to face interaction followed to deal with difficulties and clarify some issues. A post-test measuring their vocabulary growth and questionnaires to identify their opinions were then given at the end of the experiment. The result shows that while gaining significantly higher mastery of new words, the learners expressed different opinions on the use of Facebook as a means of blended learning. The majority felt that face-to-face interaction still needs to accompany the online session to clear up some difficulties and misunderstanding during the online session, while a few others opted for exclusively online session because of its efficiency and higher participation rate by passive learners.
topic Facebook, blended learning, vocabulary mastery, face-to-face interaction
url http://journal.unika.ac.id/index.php/celt/article/view/411
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