English version of this page

Disputas: Jarl Kleppe Kristensen

Master  Jarl Kleppe Kristensen ved CEMO - Senter for Pedagogiske målinger vil forsvare sin avhandling "Pieces in the Puzzle of Language Learning On the Roles of Morphological Knowledge, App-Based Implicit Learning and Child-App Interactions" for graden Philosophiae Doctor (ph.d.): 

Bilde av kandidaten.

Foto: Shane Colvin/UiO.

Tid og sted for prøveforelesning

Prøveforelesning

Bedømmelseskomité

  • Første opponent: Førsteamanuensis Helen Breadmore, University of Birmingham, England
  • Andre opponent: Førsteamanuensis Michalis Michaelides, University of Cyprus, Kypros
  • Komiteleder: Professor Vibeke Grøver, Institutt for pedagogikk, Universitetet i Oslo, Norge 

Leder av disputas

Professor Rolf Vegar Olsen, CEMO - Senter for pedagogiske målinger, Universitet i Oslo, Norge

Veileder

  • Førsteamanuensis Björn Andersson, CEMO - Senter for pedagogiske målinger, Universitet i Oslo, Norge
  • Førsteamanuensis Janne von Koss Torkildsen, Institutt for spesialpedagogikk, Universitet i Oslo, Norge

Sammendrag

Vocabulary, knowledge of word meanings, is essential for comprehension and production of oral and written language. It is, however, an unconstrained skill that covers a vast content area. This makes explicit teaching of every single word in a language an impossible task. Additionally, teaching the meanings of specific words is unlikely to provide transfer of knowledge to other words. We need to target knowledge and skills that are generalizable. Furthermore, educational games and apps have come to play large parts in education. While educational software can provide efficient and effective parts of education, learning gains depend on how children interact with the software. The overarching aim of this thesis is to unravel some of the pieces in the puzzle of app-based language learning, focusing specifically on morphological knowledge, implicit learning, and child-app interaction.

In Article 1, we found evidence that implicit app-based morphological training provides generalizable and durable effects on children’s word knowledge. Article 2 focused on morphological knowledge, and provides support of a multidimensional view, where morphological knowledge consists of morphological awareness, morphological decoding and morphological analysis. Article 3 examined repeated mistakes, a child-app interaction pattern, and found that children with less prior knowledge are more likely to repeat mistakes. Furthermore, children with a high propensity to repeat mistakes have lower expected learning gains than low-propensity children with the same pre-test score. Finally, Article 4 investigated task and child covariates of repeated mistakes. We found the number of repeated mistakes made relates to task type and task position in a session, as well as children’s receptive knowledge of morphologically complex words and non-verbal ability.

 In the extended abstract, I discuss these four articles, highlighting key findings and contributions, and providing recommendations for both research and practice. To sum up briefly, an implicit app-based morphological intervention can contribute to language learning, but we need to pay close attention to how children interact with the app, as some interaction patterns may hinder children’s learning.

 

Publisert 15. mars 2024 09:43 - Sist endret 29. apr. 2024 09:20