Introduction, Regine Hampel and Ursula Stickler (Open
University, UK)
Part I: CALL through the Ages
1. The Formative Years through an early CALL Journal, Mike Levy
(Queensland University, Australia)
2. Technologies, Tools and Tutors, Phil Hubbard (Stanford
University, USA)
3. Tutorial CALL – Language Practice with the Computer, Mathias
Schulze (San Diego State University, USA)
4. Impact of the Pandemic on Language Education: Voices from across
the World, Aline Germain-Rutherford, Banafsheh Karamifar, Emerita
Bañados, Pauline Ernest, Sarah Heiser, Joe Hopkins, Tomáš Klinka,
Mohamad Rahimi, Jackie Robbins and Klára Ulicná (Ottawa University,
Canada; Universidad de Concepción, Chile, Universitat Oberta de
Catalunya, Spain; The Open University, UK; Charles University,
Czech Republic; Shiraz University, Iran)
Part II: Theories in CALL
5. Second Language Acquisition
Theories and TELL, Carol Chapelle (Iowa State University, USA)
6. Sociocultural Theory, Stefan Rathert (Kahramanmaras Sütçü Imam
University, Turkey) and Nese Cabaroglu (Çukurova
University,Turkey)
7. Multimodal Communication, Styliani Karatza (National and
Kapodistrian University of Athens, Greece) and Elisabetta Adami
(University of Leeds, UK)
8. (Multi-)Literacies, Anastasia O. Tzirides, Mary Kalantzis, Bill
Cope and Vania Castro (University of Illinois, USA)
9. Ecological Perspectives on CALL, Regine Hampel (Open University,
UK)
10. Motivation and Autonomy, Glenn Stockwell and Yijen Wang (Waseda
University, Japan)
11. Social Media and Intercultural Competence, Jonathon Reinhardt
(University of Arizona, USA)
Part III: Digital and Online Technologies Transforming Learning
and Teaching
12. Digital Screen Mediation in Language
Teaching, Carla Meskill (University of Albany, USA)
13. MOOCs for Language Learning, Elena Martin-Monje (UNED Madrid,
Spain)
14. Machine Translation in Language Learning, Teaching and
Assessment, Karina von Lindeiner-Stráský and Andrew Gargett (Open
University, UK)
15. Data-Driven Language Learning, Alex Boulton (Université de
Lorraine, France) and Pascual Pérez-Paredes (Universidad de Murcia,
Spain)
16. Augmented and Virtual Reality in CALL, Stella Hadjistassou and
Maria Iosifina Avgousti (University of Cyprus, Cyprus)
17. Maker Culture and Design, Sébastien Dubreil and Stephan Caspar
(Carnegie Mellon University, USA)
Part IV: Moving the Learner Online
18.Virtual Exchange as a Tool for Intercultural Communicative
Competence Development in Contemporary Foreign Language Education,
Linda Gijsen, Silvia Canto and Kristi Jauregi-Ondarra (Utrecht
University, the Netherlands)
19. Social Presence in Multimodal Virtual Exchange and Online
Teaching, Müge Satar (Newcastle University, UK)
20.Translingual Online Identities, Emotionality and Pedagogy,
Sender Dovchin, Stephanie Dryden and Ana Tankosic (Curtin
University, Australia)
21. A Hopeful Future for Mobile Language Learning, Agnes
Kukulska-Hulme (Open University, UK)
22. Critical CALL: Towards Social Justice and Equity in Language
Education, Liudmila Klimanova (University of Arizona, USA) and
Kathryn Murphy-Judy (Virginia Commonwealth University, USA)
Part V: Research Methodologies and Methods
23. Activity Theory and CALL, Françoise Blin, Aparajita
Dey-Plissonneau (Dublin City University, Ireland) and Sagun
Shrestha (Open University, UK)
24. A Translanguaging and Multimodal Approach to Video-Mediated
‘Street Language Learning’, Maria Grazia Sindoni (University of
Messina, Italy) and Wing Yee Jenifer Ho (Hong Kong Polytechnic
University, Hong Kong)
25. Reconceptualizing Negotiation of Meaning as Multimodal in
Desktop and Mobile Videoconferencing, Helen Lee (Open University,
UK)
26. Doing N/Ethnography in the Nexus of Language Learning and
Technology: Trends and Looking Ahead, Sangeeta Bagga-Gupta
(Jönköping University, Sweden) and Sylvi Vigmo (Gothenburg
University, Sweden)
27. Social Network Theory for Language Education Research, Martina
Emke (Fachhochschule Bielefeld, Germany) and Olivia Kelly (Open
University, UK)
28. Participant-Focused Eyetracking in a Sociocultural Framework,
Ursula Stickler (Open University, UK) and Lijing Shi (London School
of Economics, UK)
Part VI: Teachers’ Needs and Initiatives
29.
Hybridization in the K-12 Educational Context and CALL for a
Digital and Post-Pandemic Era, Martine Pellerin (University of
Alberta, USA)
30. Digital Multimodal Pedagogy for Teacher Training, Mimi Li
(Texas A&M University-Commerce, USA) and Lianjiang Jiang
(University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong)
31. Tips for Teachers, All Authors
Conclusion, Regine Hampel and Ursula Stickler (Open University,
UK)
Index
Provides an overview of the history, methods, theory, practice and current debates in technology-enhanced language learning.
Regine Hampel is Professor of Open and Distance Language
Learning at the Open University, UK.
Ursula Stickler is Senior Lecturer in German at the Open
University, UK.
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