Technology-Enhanced Language Learning
The workshop was attended by 35 participants-”researchers, educators, multimedia software producers, and publishers-”all of whom are involved in various aspects of TELL, most notably natural language processing or NLP; corpus linguistics; computer-assisted language learning; and lexicography.
Presentations were given by experts from around the world, including representatives from Europe, Asia, and the US, on such topics as computer-assisted pronunciation training, proofreading tools, language games, mobile language learning, and the future of the dictionary. Accompanying discussions fostered synergies between academics and industrial stakeholders, and by the workshop's end, a roadmap for seven future areas of collaboration had been identified:
- NLP-based corpus-informed error detection and feedback;
- New mobile learning environments: communities of use, needs, and activities;
- Web aggregators and filters;
- Use of spoken learner corpora to improve speech recognition systems;
- Integration and exploitation of learner corpora within Learning Management Systems (LMS);
- Design and collection of multilingual multimodal pedagogically relevant CEF-related corpora;
- Automated design of new bilingual dictionaries.
A volume on Language in Technology-Enhanced Learning: Issues, Challenges and Prospects, edited by Sylviane Granger and Agnes Kukulska-Hulme, will be available in 2008.
To join IDILL or to receive a PDF version of the workshop abstracts, contact Sylviane Granger.