In spring 2020 both teachers and learners experienced the interruption of education as it had been established for over 150 years and seemed to be unchangeable. The paper focuses on students’ perspectives on how they perceive the changes in learning due to the pandemic educational emergency response based on the results of a survey of students in four countries: Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia, Poland and Turkey. We aim at discussing the data collected at the end of the 2019-2020 Spring semester. The research focuses on the accessibility of the tools for learning, modes of instruction, as well as interaction patterns. In addition, we present students’ opinions on the difficulties they experienced, the learning strategies they adopted and what aspects of online learning should remain as a regular educational practice after the pandemic period.
Online crowdsourcing sites/platforms have become popular in recent
years. This study aims to uncover when, where, and how language learners in
Turkey (TUR), Poland (POL), Macedonia (MAC), and Bosnia and Herzegovina
(B&H) make use of the available crowdsourcing websites/games to learn
foreign languages. To ensure parallelism among the data collected in the
four countries, a cross-culturally appropriate online questionnaire in
English comprised of two parts was designed for this study. Part one
gathered information about the use of crowdsourcing sites, tools, and games,
while part two elicited background information related to the participants
(N=211). The data were analysed considering country- and context-specific
variables. The results show that there are more similarities than
differences in the ways informants in the studied countries perceive, and
employ crowdsourcing resources to learn languages. Therefore, the findings
might provide insights for experts, material developers and teacher trainers
striving to create cross-culturally valid crowdsourcing
platforms/games.
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