December 2, 2004
Results of the survey of all 28 students
in RussA 1121 in the Fall 2004 on their impressions of using Web
Audio Lab (version 1.1). This was the second year the program was used.
The students were assigned to complete two Lessons for every Monday and
Thursday class, thus completing four Lessons each week. Slava reviewed their
recordings on the server and sometimes (perhaps in 15-20% of all recordings)
provided short corrective comments. All other recordings were marked with a
one-word evaluative comment (Excellent. Very good. Good. OK.)
1) On the scale of
1 to 10, how helpful was the use of WAL this semester in terms of preparing for
class?
7, 7, 8, 9, 8, 8, 8, 9, 8, 9, 8, 9, 8, 7, 7, 9, 10, 8, 7, 7,
10, 10, 9, 8, 8, 10. Average: 7.7
2) On the scale of
1% to 100%, how beneficial was using WAL to prepare for class compared to the
other materials you used when doing your homework for Russian 1121--the
textbook, the dictionary, the Quiz program, and the BRTF multimedia Web site?
In other words, what proportion of your preparation for class in this course
came from WAL overall?
40, 40, 65, 70, 40, 45, 60, 20, 40,
40, 70, 70, 60, 30, 30, 30, 50, 55, 35, 20, 90, 33, 50, 40, 70, 60. Average: 44.8%
3) If you studied
other foreign languages and used traditional audio tapes or compact disks, how
would you describe the difference in terms of your experience and benefits for
learning when using WAL?
- I've studied English as a second language and have
developed my way of learning it by utilizing audio tapes and sound files
that are available on the internet. WAL is more efficient than my
experience because it enables me to practice responding to a question
within a time limit. Also, when using WAL, I don't have to click a stop
button every single time to repeat or respond to what I've just heard. It
automatically gives me time to respond--which makes everything convenient.
- I have used tapes before in other language courses
(though not at Cornell), and I think WAL is much more convenient. I can use it at home and submit my
answers from home, which I really like.
The only weakness of WAL in comparison to audio tapes is that
sometimes I end up reading the answer more than listening to it and
repeating what I hear.
- it is a quicker program, and very modern.
- other foreign language a/v material only involved
listening. I thought that the opportunity to speak and have pronunciation
commented on was useful.
- I find WAL to be much more interactive than other types
of tapes or audio programs that I have used in the past. Most other audio programs focus on just
listening rather than speaking and listening.
- WAL is much easier to use than audio tapes or compact
discs because both the recording and listening are provided in a simple
way with WAL; both aspects are part of one easy to use program that
provides for convenient re recording in the event of a mistake. There is no rewinding necessary! It is very easy to recheck specific
responses with the click of a button.
- No difference, wal provided the same service for my
studies as the other tapes i used for other languages. Same overall
benefits. How and why would things be different? Audio tapes, disks, and
wal all provide the same overall experience and benefits for learning.
- I learn better if I hear it and I need to say it, so this
definitely helped a lot.
- WAL is much more personalized and one has the ability to
test themselves much better that just tapes or compact discs.
- I found it much more versatile than any other
listening/recording medium I have used. I find the specific technique of
making parallel recordings that I can go back and compare (and get
comments on) extremely useful. Besides now using it with Russian I also
used this technique with Kazakh and I found it indispensable in developing
a near-native like accent.
- Far easier to use than tapes (ESPECIALLY when I was
expected to record) or online audio resources. Very nice to be able to
work from home without having to go to a language lab. The ability to
easily overwrite recordings made it much easier to recover when I
inevitably made mistakes.
- The benefits were being not only being able to hear
spoken Russian, but also to repeat and compare the phrases with my own.
- The recordable response definitely helped with
pronunciation, more so than a group repeating what a tape says.
- WAL is probably the best language-learning tool I've ever
used. Inaddition to the pronunciation and vocabulary development with
whichtraditional tape/cd sets have helped me, WAL also allowed me to hear
myown pronunciation. Also, although they drove me crazy sometimes,
the"fill-in-the-blank" sections of the later WAL exercises were
great forforcing me to actually listen to and then use the language as
opposed tosimply repeating it.
- The fact that I actually had to turn in recordings that
tested my comprehension forced me to learn the language better. It also accelerated my pronunciation of
the language.
- The fill-in-tge-blanks part of WAL requires much more
thought and comprehension than other language tapes. Also, regular tapes
don't give you feedback on your pronunciation.
4) If you never
used tapes or CDs when studying a foreign language, how would you describe the
benefits of using WAL this semester?
- good to hear
the correct way to say words and the speed tests allow you figure out the
proper endings based on the case we are learning.
- pronounciation
would be wrong.
- it really helped in hearing and speaking the language in
real time.
- It's certainly beneficial as it allows for verbal
practice and for an interactive supplement to the material covered in
class. Among other aspects, I appreciate the opportunity to hear my own
speech and to compare it to the correct way of speaking.
- Much better than not using it. It allows me better
understanding of the material by the time I get to class. WAL gives me a
much better idea of how lessons, exercises, homework, dialogues, etc. are
supposed to sound than I would have just from reading the book.
- ? Very good, my experience in learning russian would not
be complete without using wal everyday before class to prepare.
- I probably wouldn't have learned as much as I have.
- I liked being able to hear how to pronounce the words and
also the ability to speed up my pronunciation with practice
- I like using WAL because it gives me different native
speaker to listen to and helps me hear how my Russian sounds. If I were to
study abroad or something, i could go back over my recordings and see
where I'm lacking in pronuncation or speed.
- Plenty of practice, especially the difficult phrases I
had to say over and over to get them right. Also, in conjunction with the
quizes, these helped a lot with understanding grammatical rules - I learn
better by example than by book definitions.
- I think that I might have spent more time in the book,
but would have less mastery of the conversational/spoken aspect.
- It would mostly just hurt pronunciation - though some of
the cases would suffer as well, especially the later ones.
- It would have been disastrous. I mean, I would have still
been able tolearn the cases, conjugations, etc., but would not have had
the chance toactually use them. Also, I feel as though my pronunciation,
while stillnot very good, has improved immensely over the semester, and,
as Imentioned above, I think that this improvement has resulted mostly
fromthe WAL exercises.
- The WAL software was a useful tool for going through and
practicing the lessons from class, but I found it required much
preparation through writing the lessons out before I felt I was
understanding what I was doing in the WAL lessons.
- The WAL program was much more useful, not only in quality
so that it could be heard, but for the feedback it provided.
- Listening to the tapes and trying to imitate how the
speakers sounded was very helpful, especially with pronounciation
- WAL helped me to fine-tune my pronunciation. I don't
think I could learn Russian effectively without WAL.
5) If Russian 1121
did not use any audio as part of the homework, how do you think that would
affect your learning this semester?
- It would have been much harder for us to become familiar
with the sounds of Russian. I feel priviledged to utilize this great
software. I really thought that these educators of Russian at Cornell
actually KNOW how to study a foreign language.
- I'm glad Russian 1121 uses audio homework, I think it's
really important to have something to listen to in order to understand
correct pronunciation, etc. It was
especially helpful when we were learning how to pronounce palatalized
consonants.
- We would spend a lot more time in class discussing the
endings of words and how to pronounce them.
- I think the practice speaking, and listening to people
clearly enunciate on the headphones, helped, especially as Russian
pronunciation and sounds are more difficult than many other languages.
- pronunciation, knowledge of the language, and quickness
in responding in russian would all be less.
- My pronunciation of words would be significantly
worse. I think WAL also helps with
learning to respond orally to oral material rather than just writing and
reading.
- It'd certainly have had a negative impact. Some of the
likely results would be weaker verbal comprehension and expression, weaker
command of the material and the language as a whole, lower level of
understanding in class, and lower level of self-confidence when
communicating in the language.
- The class would be more difficult, harder to keep up with
and harder to understand.
- I would not have had as much oral practice, which is
essential in order to train myself to recognize correct sounds and
pronunciations.
- I do not think I would be as proficient in speaking
Russian without WAL
- I'm not sure, I guess it would make my listening
comprehension and spoken RUssian weaker ,but it may give me much more time
to focus on harder grammatical aspects of hte language
- Yes, significantly. It was a big time commitment, but I
think one that pays off.
- This would negatively affect my learning. I would have a greater difficulty
learning pronunctiation and stress.
- I don't think that there is enough class time for the
instructors to give the needed individual attention to develop correct
pronunciation, stress and intonation.
- I would be a much slower speaker, less confident, easily
tripped up by long words or unfamiliar sounds---and all with horrible
intonation.
- My learning would have been severely impeded without the
use of audio.
- I think I would have practiced out loud less often, and
this would have hurt me. The WAL program forces you to actually speak the
language outside of class as opposed to just reading it.
- I don't think I would have learned the language as
quickly without the WAL recordings.
I think it was the most effective learning tool (excluding the
textbook) of the class. I know that
I would not have learned the new sounds, pronunciations, and alphabet as
quickly without it.
- I would spend more time studying the textbook some days,
but to be honest, I probably wouldn't spend so much time on the lessons.
- I might take twice or three times as long to reach the
same level
6) What other
teaching/learning methods could be used to replace the type of work you did
with WAL? How would that be better or worse?
- Shadowing (imitating sentences as a native speaker speaks
in a media file): This helps us be able to read out Russian sentences with
a normal speed, as read by native speakers. It doesn't give us an option
of reading them in our pace while WAL allows to repeat sentences slower
than normal. Role-play with classmates: It may replace the
question-and-answer part of WAL. But WAL is preferred to this because
students don't want to go through a hassle of meeting up at a certain time
and a place to do this assignment. Dictation Practice: First, have
students listen to an audio or a video clip and, as they listen, have them
write out the Russian sentences in words. This may require listening to
the clip countless times. Then, let them compare their work with the real
texts used in the clip. It helps learners catch up the Russian sounds more
carefully.
- Audio tapes could replace the learning done through WAL,
but as I said above, I think WAL is much more convenient and
interactive. However, maybe it
should be more difficult to READ the answers, because this is an easy
shortcut to get around actually listening.
Also, the exercises where we have to fill in the blanks in the
sentence (with the correct case) are easy to take shortcuts on....for
instance, you can skip ahead to read the answer, and then go back and just
say it. The ease of doing this
makes it undesirable to actually sit down and go through the book and make
sure you understand the cases and know the answers before doing the WAL
homework. Maybe a better solution
would be to have the answers available only at the end of the exercise.
- I don`t know what could replace it and have the same
effects
- more written work-we would lose all that i mentioned in
5.
- Going through an oral exercise that is of a longer
duration might be helpful, especially one that doesn't prompt an exact
answer. For example, we could have
to say several sentences (like a paragraph worth) about what we did the
previous weekend, etc.
- I feel that WAL is an effective teaching method, I cannot
think of reasons why it would need to be replaced
- There is no substitute for Wal. I, frankly, would not be able
to imagine a more thorough form of pre-class preparation.
- I can't think of anything at the moment. It was nice to
be able to compare your recording with the pre-recorded recording to
figure out how you were pronouncing words incorrectly. There are so many
subtle changes in pronounciation, expecially in the beginning that the
program really helped me with.
- The only thing that I can think of to replace WAL would
be more personal speaking time with the instructors one-on-one
- We could use tapes, but that's clumsy, old fashioned and
very very tim consuming. I guess we could send mp3 and stuff on the
internet, but I like the way we can listen and record in the same program
with WAL.
- The use of tapes or CDs might replace it. However without the self and instructor
evaluations the experience might be slightly worse.
- If you could put WAL onto a portable device, that would
definitely extend its usefulness. On the negative side I find some of the
grammar substitution drills mind-numbing. I still need a lot of effort to
produce some of the longer responses so if
there is no immediate model, I make and perpetuate pronunciation
errors when I am working on producing the correct grammatical response.
From your comments in class today about how one certain word was
mispronounced I wonder if that is a more common experience. With my
present ability I might do better
with the simpler, more traditional model-cue substitution drill.
- Nothing that would be better: cassette tapes are annoying
and require a tape deck; CDs or online resources don't support recording
and are too easy to skip. (Being able to skip the homework will, by the
end of the semester, guarantee that I don't do it.) I like this crazy WAL
thing. I suppose an hour-long personal interview with the teacher would
accomplish the same thing better, but that's not in any wise practical.
- I honestly can't think of anything that would compare to
it; the only suggestion I have would be to maybe have a few
"basics" interspersed throughout the recordings-- it sometimes
feels like I don't know exactly what I'm saying when I say it. If there
were a little bit of grammer actually on the screen, with the lesson, that
would be beneficial.
- The only think I can think of here is one-on-one sessions
with the instructors, as that would give better feedback and amore dynamic
environment - as that's not entirely feasible, WAL is the next best thing.
- I can't think of anything I would change. I've taken lots
of languagecourses, and this is easily the most complete class I've been
in.
- I found the most important benefit of the WAL lessons was
in pronunciation, and there may be another method to teach pronunciation
without extensively speaking through the lessons.
- I don't think that anything that could replace the
program would have been more useful.
- When the classes were very small, I found that to be much
more helpful.
- I don't see any practical alternatives to the WAL program
that would teach the language as well.
- We could do the textbook drills in class, but that would
take time away from what we do right now (grammar questions, dialogs,
etc.). We could also watch more films, but that doesn't require as much
comprehension or allow for feedback.
- I don't think "replace". How about supplement?
More opportunity for simple self-expression would be nice.
7) Assuming that
the use of technology always involves some hassle because of the glitches, user
errors, and just having to go to the lab, how would you describe the trade-off
of benefits vs. the hassle?
- WAL has a lot more benefits than hassles. It's worth it.
- I don't think there's too much hassle with WAL, thus I
would say the benefits greatly outweigh the hassle.
- better to have it without a doubt
- WAL was very easy to use. Going to the lab was not too
much hassle for me, as I usually had time during the day.
- i really didn't run into very much trouble, and i have a
copy on my own computer, so there wasnt much hassle. so the benefits
definitely win
- I think WAL directs the amount of time spent going over
the lesson by walking me through each one rather than having to learn it
all on my own.
- I believe that the benefits should outweigh the costs in
this case.
- It's not too much of a hassle and the benefits are
important. I can't get to the lab on certain days but the WAL work is
spaced out enough that on less busy days I can stay for a couple of hours
and get two or three classes' work done. Any hassles are worth enduring to
be prepared for class.
- There are certainly less hassles than tape
recording. The convenience of the
program outweighs the rare and minor glitches.
- I had experienced no technical glitches. And buying the
CD from the lab and being able to use it at home for the who year was
defintely a great idea. In other words, i experienced no hassles.
- well, once I got a copy for home, the only problem I had
with it is that I needed to set aside a lot of time and concentration to
do it, but it was definately worth it. I never really encountered any
problems with the program itself.
- There were only rare problems, which I feel can be
forgiven
- The trade off is generally worth it, although if you were
to ask me when I just closed WAL after not fully submitting all my work,
I"d answer differentely.
- I didn't have many technical troubles. There was the
hassle of going to the lab, because I live off campus - in the future I
will make sure to get the program on my computer.
- The benefits of having one's speaking ability evaluated
at a personal level outweigh the hassle of having to go to the lab.
- Negligible hassles, great benefits.
- I encountered no glitches, and WAL recovered remarkably
well from user errors. If I had been forced to go to the lab, though, all
ease-of-use ratings would be lower. As mentioned about, that can be a real
hardship for some people.
- The hassle was very minimal.
- I would have to say it is worth the hassle, though some
parts of the listening are difficult to understand.
- I had a few problems during the first few weeks with my
submissions, butafter that everything was fine. The benefits of the
program definitelyoutweighed what little hassle there was.
- I only had one issue with the WAL program, and it was a
problem with my computer, not the program itself. I thought the program
was very easy to use, and the ability to use the program at home was a big
benefit.
- The biggest hassle was probably the language lab itself.
The hours they were open were so limited.
- The benefits far outweighed the hassles, which were
minimal. I did not find the system
difficult to use as well. And the
server had few problems or glitches
- It;s good to have a predetermined block of time that
_must_ be spent on Russian. The only problem I've had consistently is
headsets not working, but overall it's worthwhile.
8) Compared to
your general experience with computers, please rate the effort that was
required to learn using WAL on the scale of 1 (very easy to learn) to 10 (very
hard to learn).
1, 1, 2, 2, 1, 1, 1, 2, 1, 1, 4, 2, 1, 4, 1, 2, 1, 2, 1, 2,
1, 3, 1, 1, 2, 2, 1. Average: 1.6
9) If you were to
advise a teacher who is setting up a beginning course in some foreign language
at Cornell, would you recommend that WAL be used in that language? Use the
scale of 1 (not recommended) to 10 (highly recommended).
10, 10, 8, 10, 10, 9, 9, 9, 8, 10, 10, 9, 9, 7, 8, 10, 10,
9, 9, 10, 10, 5, 10, 8, 9, 10, 9. Average:
8.8
10) Please explain
your rating in question 9, above. What considerations influenced your response?
- To be able to listen and speak in a foreign language, it
is crucial to listen to the sounds of the language A LOT and to practice
speaking out loud in the language A LOT. It's an axiom in language
learning. This WAL program efficiently provides students with an
opportunity to do these activities!!!
- Again, it's really convenient to use, it aids in learning
pronunciation, and I think it's better than audio tapes. However, the ease of reading the answers
instead of really having to listen to them should be addressed.
- The biggest problem for me is the length of some of the
programs. It is sometimes hard to find an hour or two to sit down and do
the WALs for that day. Even if they were split up for everyday that might
make the especially long ones easier.
- I like the program, it keeps my mind in the language
every day but only for an hour or so, so it's not annoying.
- Since students usually have no one-on-one interaction
with the teacher, I think WAL is the only chance people get to have
specific problems with accents or pronunciation corrected
- I think hearing and responding helps more than most
anything else in learning a new language.
- WAL is very helpful for pronunciation, spelling, reading,
listening, etc. I think that the
sections with question-response are very helpful and the mimicking
sections particularly facillitate good pronunciation.
- It translates the text in the book into the audio format
necessary for learning words and grammar points in the
speaking/conversational context. Class time is more productive if I have
already had some practice speaking and have an idea of how words and
phrases should sound. Most importantly, WAL offers feedback with the
correct pronunciation sounded out right before or after my attempts, so
there is the chance for repetition and correction of mistakes that's often
impossible in the class setting (for instance, there are certain words I
know I'd never be able to pronounce if I hadn't had to say them about 100
times apiece before getting them right in WAL).
- WAL has been an excellent tool in learning how to
pronounce words and phrases, especially stresses and the
"raise-drop" that varies according to intended tones or
messages. Simply reading a phrase
in a book does not fully show me how to pronounce it.
- Russian vocabulary is hard to pronounce. Wal helped me on
that. No forign language learning is sufficient without it.
- The program was definately a big help with learning
russian and would probably be a good tool for learning many other
languages.
- It is the closest thing to personal instruction without
an actual teacher, so it saves time
- I really like WAL and what it provides us, but wish it
was for mac users!! It could also be a little updated, I see so much of
the program it makes me feel like i'm working on my apple iie
sometimes.... there are some hidden aspects that take a while to find and
figure out, but generally very easy.
- It allowed a mastery of pronunctiations and stress that
just doing homework or other written work did not allow. There is also a
more personalized evaluation with WAL than with classroom participation.
- (I would hope that you can see if there is any difference
in the students' performance. I would be interested in your evaluation!)
My subjective reasons are given in point 3.
- Unless the teacher feels the entire out-of-class
listen-and-record concept is unnecessary, WAL is the best way I've seen of
doing it. And if they do feel it's unnecessary, they're wrong. I spent a
little over half the out-of-class time on WAL, and it was more helpful
than most things other than reading the new information (grammar, etc.) in
the book.
- It's a great idea, well-implemented, and with perhaps a
few touch ups, it'd provide a perfect supplemental tool to language
learning.
- WAL is useful enough to merit using for any language, so
suggesting it would only help the students.
- As I mentioned above, WAL has been invaluable. The
program is easy tolearn, easy to use and helps with all facets of language
learning, bothtechnical and conversational. I wish there was a WAL program
for Arabic.
- My rating of five reflects my appreciation for the
material and potential and thoroughness of the WAL assignments, but I do
not know if I would recommend the extensive use of WAL, dissecting each
and every dialog and substitution, to all foreign language courses.
- Any size class will have some people talking more than
others, and the program allows everyone ample time. The largest
consideration was the fact that it was a beginner class, and so many new
things are going into it. Basic pronunciation can be a challenge
initially, and the program is able to pick up on these things before they
become habits.
- It is very helpful, but the small glitches in the program
could cause trouble for people unfamiliar with computers.
- I have used tools in other foreign language classes that
just required listening, but not speaking.
They did not force the students to learn, understand, and speak the
language. WAL makes sure that
students really comprehend the material.
- It's been extremely easy and helpful.
- WAL might be more useful for languages which are less
phonetic or have phonemes simlar to English. (I don't know what I'm saying
here) Certainly it can also be used for phonetic languages but maybe in
that case we might want to focus more on expression or listening to native
speakers talk than correct pronunciation.
11) Additional
comments
- I personally think more listening and repeating (plus
memorizing) of Russian sentences is necessary for us to achieve the
satisfactory level of second language acquisition. But, as everybody
realizes, Cornell students cannot devote themselves only to learning a
foreign language. I think it's already taking up a large portion of their
studying time. So we can only do the best we can do. But for those of us
that are eager to master Russian, it might be a good idea to distribute a
cassette tape or a CD version of WAL so that students can play it as they
walk around the campus or in their spare time. Thank YOU for developing
this great software for us!!! I'm really proud of Conell's Russian
language program.
- Not really a comment, but there's a bug with uploading in
the mac version that will sometimes cause the program to crash or freeze
during an upload. Don't know exactly what it is.
- Overall, I think that the WAL program is very beneficial.
However, a few small modifications may make it even better; it may also be
supported by a speech recognition capability, allowing us to see how
understandable our speech is before submitting the file.
- EVERYTIME we are asked to repeat something, we should be
able to see the definition of what the heck we are saying right on the
screen. I dont want to have to keep switching between reading my Beginning
russian book and the computer screen to find out what im saying into the
microphone.
- The earlier I did the WAL for the lessons we were doing,
the more I understood and got out of class.
- The enter key on the numeric part of the keyboard doesn't
function the same as the enter key on the qwerty side. It would be nice if the
uploading connection didn't delay moving on to the next exercise. It would
be nice if there was a pane that would more or less instantly show us the
status of the uploaded exercises (what is now done by the web page and the
"updating" feature). My personal preference is to do some audio
work before learning grammar, but just keeping up with the homework, I
missed the earlier audio input. I don't know how I would restructure the
homework to make it come out right for me, though. (I think I personally
just need to be a day ahead on the homework!)
- Unless
the teacher feels the entire out-of-class listen-and-record concept is
unnecessary, WAL is the best way I've seen of doing it. And if they do
feel it's unnecessary, they're wrong. I spent a little over half the
out-of-class time on WAL, and it was more helpful than most things other
than reading the new information (grammar, etc.) in the book. It is very
important that students be able to use WAL from home. For upperclassmen,
it can take +30 minutes to get to the language lab, which means at least 2
hours must be budgeted to do the homework on campus. This is a significant
investment of time, and no student should be forced to modify her class or
work schedule just to find time to get to Noyes. Since it is very
difficult (and probably not a good idea) to work ahead of the syllabus,
it's very helpful to have the added flexibility in working from home. The
only complaint I had with the original version of WAL (that sometimes
submission took too long, and could be interrupted too easily by network
traffic) was resolved with the beta version (11.03.04) Slava gave me. (All
ratings are based on this more recent version.) Running from CD is
difficult (or rather annoying), as the CD spins down too quickly/often.
Everything still works, but there is intermittent lag when loading the
next sound file. (Nothing unexpected here, just how CD drives work.)
Fortunately, moving the files from CD onto disk resolves this problem and
makes everything fast. A very basic installer (just copy files and create
a shortcut) might help students who would not be able to move the files
manually, but could still benefit from running WAL from disk. It might be
nice (depending on how concerned you are with security) to allow saving of
passwords between sessions. Perhaps this could be permanently allowed/disallowed
at install time, letting home users enable the option, while still letting
it be disabled on the lab computers. Sometimes in the call-and-response
sections, when the template for the response was long and unfamiliar, I
would find myself forced to open the book and read along just so that I
could get through the sentence. Just showing the template on screen would
be helpful. Sometimes the responses given seemed a bit arbitrary (that is,
I felt my "incorrect" response was equally valid), and this was---irrationally,
I admit---sort of annoying.
- There's not much more to say. Without sounding too corny,
it actually makes learning a language decently fun; listening to
recordings and repeating them (as opposed to recording them) doesn't have
the same sort of... motivation behind it. All in all, I'm glad it's part
of the class.
- The server is a bit inconsistent, and sometimes the
submission ofresponses freezes up or aborts fro no particular reason.
Other than that,maybe slow down some of the listening sections, when a
word blurs into anearly incomprehenisble flurry of sound, it's hard to get
itspronunciation correct.
- The WAL assignments were easily the most important
elements in my class preparation.
- I have been impressed all semester with the cohesiveness
of all the teaching materials in the course and WAL is an excellent
supplement to the text, dictionary, writing assignments, and classroom
dialog.
- On very few of the spoken parts, the reader is a little
difficult to hear or understand. The only helpful thing about the program
might be to re-record a few of these parts. I think the individualized feedback was
essential for the class, and I don't know how that could have been done on
such a scale without submitted recordings. I thought the program was helpful,
but I also thought the comments left were even more helpful than the
preparation it provided. The WAL program was very helpful, especially since it followed
the text. (While some of the quizzes didn't seem to correlate as closely.)
- It is very helpful, but the small glitches in the program
could cause trouble for people unfamiliar with computers. I liked the WAL program. I
learned the lessons much better once I used the program. It was very helpful in
learning how to pronounce the new words. It was easier to remember the
new material once I had used the WAL program, then it was to just read the
beginning russian book.
- I have used tools in other foreign language classes that
just required listening, but not speaking.
They did not force the students to learn, understand, and speak the
language. WAL makes sure that
students really comprehend the material. The only issue I had was hooking up the
headset to my own PC.
- It's been extremely easy and helpful.
- I think that WAL has been a crucial part of Russian 1121
this semester. As a student living off campus, having to go the the lab
twice a week did present some hassle, however, the benefits received from
the program far outweighed the inconvenience. (Also, I would like to note
that part of this hassle was due more to the hours that Noyes Lab is open,
rather than simply having to go there.) I think that WAL was especially
helpful in preparation for class, although it was also somewhat helpful
when preparing for written work. Overall, I do not think that I would have
gotten half as much out of this course if it did not include WAL.
Personally, I found it very easy to learn and navigate and with only a few
exceptions, the program ran very smoothly for me. I appreciate that the
program provides options such as "easy mode" and the length
allowed to record. Some of the assignments were very lengthy, but I think
that most were very reasonable. This is my first experience using media in
language learning, however, I would definitely recommend this program to
professors in other languages or to other students. I hope that this
information is helpful. Thank you to those who were involved in making the
WAL program available to us.
- WAL might be more useful for languages which are less
phonetic or have phonemes simlar to English. (I don't know what I'm saying
here) Certainly it can also be used for phonetic languages but maybe in
that case we might want to focus more on expression or listening to native
speakers talk than correct pronunciation. Personally, I did not use WAL to prepare for
class, but to reinforce what I had learnt during class.