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Effects of presentation mode on mobile language learning: A performance efficiency perspective

TLDR
The study suggested that when using mobile devices as training tools, the provision of written text facilitates the acquisition of information but not the schema construction of the English listening comprehension skill.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of simultaneous written text on the comprehension of spoken English as a foreign language, when the text is presented with the aid of a personal digital assistant (PDA) as a learning tool. Eighty-seven university students majoring in applied foreign languages were randomly assigned to either listening with auditory materials only, or listening with identical and concurrent written text. Performance efficiency was used to provide a better indicator of the quality of learning. The results revealed that for learners with lower English levels, the presence of concurrent written text elicited higher performance efficiency in the immediate recall task of the English listening comprehension. However, the beneficial effect of the written text did not extend to the subsequent auditory-only passage. The study suggested that when using mobile devices as training tools, the provision of written text facilitates the acquisition of information but not the schema construction of the English listening comprehension skill.

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Journal Article

Mobile-assisted language learning: A selected annotated bibliography of implementation studies 1994–2012

TL;DR: Since nearly 60% of MALL implementation studies appear outside of professional journals, in conference proceedings, project reports, academic dissertations, and so forth, locating copies of these publications poses a major challenge in itself.
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Preservice teachers' perceptions about using mobile phones and laptops in education as mobile learning tools

TL;DR: It was found that such variables as program/department, grade, gender and possessing a laptop are neutral in causing a practically significant difference in preservice teachers' views, which imply an urgent need to grow awareness among participating student teachers towards the concept of m-learning.
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Learning English using children's stories in mobile devices

TL;DR: It can be concluded that the developed mobile application can be used as an educational tool in teaching English as a second language and young students who may be interested in improving their listening, vocabulary, comprehension and pronunciation skills while learning English asA second language should find this mobile application enjoyable and useful.
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From Call to Mall: The Effectiveness of Podcast on EFL Higher Education Students' Listening Comprehension

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the influence of podcasting on the listening comprehension of 46 female Saudi EFL students in higher education and found significant differences between the two groups, favoring the experimental group.
Journal Article

Levels of expertise and instructional design

TL;DR: This article found that the appropriate type of structure may depend on the learner's level of expertise and that the best instructional designs changed from ones in which diagrams and text were physically integrated to those in which the text was eliminated, indicating that less expert learners using a diagram might require the diagram to be physically integrated with related text based information in order to reduce cognitive load.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Incorporating Learner Experience into the Design of Multimedia Instruction.

TL;DR: In Experiment 1, inexperienced trade apprentices were presented with one of four alternative instructional designs: a diagram with visual text, an audio-text format, or the diagram only as discussed by the authors, and the results showed that the diagram-only format was the least intelligible to inexperienced learners.
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Verbal redundancy in multimedia learning: When reading helps listening

TL;DR: The authors investigated whether and under what conditions the addition of on-screen text would facilitate the learning of a narrated scientific multimedia explanation and found that students better comprehended the explanation when the words were presented auditorily and visually rather than auditorily only, provided there was no other concurrent visual material.
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A Comparison of Three Measures of Cognitive Load: Evidence for Separable Measures of Intrinsic, Extraneous, and Germane Load

TL;DR: The authors found that the response time measure was more sensitive to manipulations of extraneous processing (created by adding redundant text), effort ratings were most sensitive to manipulation of intrinsic processing, and difficulty ratings were more sensitive with indications of germane processing (reflected by transfer test performance).
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Will mobile learning change language learning

TL;DR: It is argued that an emphasis on mobility can lead to new perspectives and practices in language learning and whether it is likely to change how languages are taught and learnt is considered.
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