given guidelines, which were designed to extract
similar information as the one extracted from the
questionnaire. All respondents reported that they use
the English language at work for all job related
aspects. They also reported that they have good
English Language skills, however, they have some
problems with IT specialized words and jargon.
They would like to improve their vocabulary,
speaking and grammar and they could spend an
average of one hour a day for that. They all learn at
the workplace and home, both on their own or as a
member of a group, and 6 of them (out of 8) have
used on-line learning material. They were very
familiar with the concepts of e-learning. The type of
e-learning material they have used was available on
training CDs and videos as well as through on-line
material available on platforms such as Moodle and
Blackboard. However, nobody has used e-learning
material to learn a language. They all believe in e-
learning and they consider it as a flexible,
autonomous, innovative, time-saving and very useful
(when it provides feedback) tool for learning. They,
therefore, would consider using e-learning for
learning a language, although they expressed a
concern regarding the reading and pronunciation
aspects that need to be very well developed within
such e-learning material. They would expect such a
tool to be available through multimedia CDs or web-
sites and collaborative software and support text-
chat computer-aided assessment, educational
animation and simulations learning environments.
They expect it also to be efficient, effective and
user-friendly and allow the support of a tutor. From
their experience in using e-learning material, bad
design and lack of technical support are factors that
affect very negatively the acceptance of such
material. Finally some of them would be interested
in obtaining a certificate for an English course
offered on-line.
Although the open-ended questions did not
suggest particular answer options (as compared to
the questionnaire), very similar recommendations
were made by the IT professionals. This shows that
our expected user requirements and functionality
and features of the proposed tool, as these were
indirectly expressed through the multiple-choice
answers in the questionnaire, were confirmed by the
non-directed answers of the IT professionals.
3 CONCLUSIONS
Based on the previous section, we herein propose the
expected functionality and features of the EIT
module. The module should support the teaching
and learning of the following English Language
skills and abilities: (a) Understanding, (b) Speaking,
(c) Reading, (d) Writing, (e) Vocabulary use, (f)
Grammar use. Furthermore, the expected module
should: (a) support both individual and group
learning (b) be able to be used as a stand-alone
module or integrated in other modules in a distance-
learning mode or in a blended learning mode (c)
support multimedia features, including animation,
video and audio (d) provide feedback and a
customizable learning environment (e) provide
computer-aided assessment (f) allow facilitator/tutor
support (g) support a simulation learning
environment (h) have a well designed user-friendly
interface (i) be efficient and effective (j) have
technical support (k) lead to a certification.
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