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A New Model for Introductory Spanish University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Dr. Glynis Cowell, Romance Languages Department Dr. Hosun Kim, Romance Languages Department Rob Moore, Romance Languages Department Bob Henshaw, Information Technology Services Erika Bagley, Psychology Department

A New Model for Introductory Spanish

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A New Model for Introductory Spanish. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Dr. Glynis Cowell, Romance Languages Department Dr. Hosun Kim, Romance Languages Department Rob Moore, Romance Languages Department Bob Henshaw, Information Technology Services - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

A New Model for Introductory SpanishUniversity of North Carolina

at Chapel Hill

Dr. Glynis Cowell, Romance Languages DepartmentDr. Hosun Kim, Romance Languages DepartmentRob Moore, Romance Languages DepartmentBob Henshaw, Information Technology ServicesErika Bagley, Psychology Department

Page 2: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Presentation overview

• Redesign rationale• Hybrid format description• Pilot results• Next steps• Q&A

Page 3: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Evolution of the UNC Spanish Language Learning Environment

• Work Study Students

• ROML

Reallocation of funding

• Construction• New

Technology

Renovation of Infrastructure • Better Signage

• New Website• New names

FLRC Redesign

Page 4: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Reallocation of Funding• Work study students were used to handle

FLRC staffing and Spanish drop-in tutoring hours– Allowed for expansion of services and cost savings

Page 5: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Pre-renovation:• Underutilized spaces

– Computer lab with 20 computers– Poor lighting

• Static room configurations– Ethernet connections

Renovation of Infrastructure

Page 6: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Wireless access points were added and both of the projectors can be connected to wirelessly via a tablet PC.

Renovated as a multi-purpose room, it now accommodates both the classroom instruction and peer group components of the course.

Page 7: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Casual furniture was added to promote community in the peer conversation groups.

Students use tablet chairs that allow for the room to be easily reconfigured for lecture or group work.

Page 8: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

FLRC Redesign• Renamed all of the rooms in the FLRC to be more

intuitive– FLRC transitioned from Analog to Digital technology

but had not renamed rooms in years.• Changed all of the FLRC signage to make it easier

to find rooms; created a room directory• Redesigned website to make it easier to find

information

Page 9: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Assessment methodology• Self-selection issue

– Student demographics, learning characteristics, and placement exam scores

• Grading issues– Use of an outside grader– Common exam sections

Page 10: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Student perceptions of skill areas

Speaking* Reading Writing Listening* Vocabulary Grammar0

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TraditionalHybrid

Page 11: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Learning outcomes

Written Exam Oral Exam*50.0

60.0

70.0

80.0

90.0

TraditionalHybrid

Page 12: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Student attitudes

Satisfaction* Frustration*0

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TraditionalHybrid

Page 13: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Sense of community

Traditional* Hybrid Classroom* Hybrid Small Group*0

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Classroom Sense of Community MeasureMcKinney, 2006

Page 14: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Cost savings• 43% reduction in cost-per-student over 20

annual sections– Fewer contact hours– Re-use of course materials

• 50% reduction in classroom utilization

Page 15: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Instructor’s feedback• Instructors enjoyed the hybrid course because of the flexibility.

• The greatest challenge that instructors had with the hybrid course was maintaining contact and open communication with students.

• In response to this challenge, instructors worked extra hard to establish relationships with students.

• Instructors felt that overall students who had previous study of Spanish adapted more quickly to the model and exhibited more confidence in the course.

Page 16: A New Model for  Introductory Spanish

Questions?