Self-Assessment
• I was able to evaluate my own progress during
the course of the lesson.
Interaction
• The classroom interactions was dynamic
Learning quality
• In general I had a quality learning experience.
3.3 Results and Discussion
The result of Pre / Post Test showed that Experiment
group performed better than Control group.
Table 1: The Analysis Results of the Experimental and
Control Group.
average N
Standard
deviation
Average
difference
t
p-value
-both
Control
group
Pre 52.4542 14 11.64930
18.8933 2.0739 .0002
Post 71.3475 14 10.84924
Experimen
tal group
Pre 54.2302 14 10.84924
23.8304 2.0738 .0000
Post 78.0606 14 8.41123
In the post-test, both experimental group and
control group showed improvement in marks 23.83
and 18.89 respectively when compared to that of
pre-test. Slight decrease in standard deviation was
shown in both groups but experimental group
showed greater reduction in deviation of test scores.
The data compiled via the survey questionnaire
showed learners’ perceptions to the use of Clickers
as follows:
Motivation: the interest level for both group was
considered high. 70% of Experimental group
responded that using Clickers was fun
Involvement: Learners involved themselves
more actively in answering to the question,
discussing with peers, expressing their ideas without
social risks when they use Clickers. The survey
showed that there exists a certain level of
apprehensiveness when speaking up in class. Hence,
there is a demand to minimize this classroom
anxiety, which is in turn addressed through mediums
like Clickers that help learners express their ideas
anonymously.
Comparison: Learners faces difficulties when
they have answers which are different from the ones
accepted by the majority. While control group
responded that they are affected by other people’s
answer, experimental group responded that they
were not affected by answers from others.
Self-Assessment: While answering the question
by participating in poll, Clicker users could receive
the feedback promptly and used the feedback as a
resource for peer discussion and self assessment.
Learners could have more chances to reorganize
their own underlying and developing language
system, to frame and try out new hypotheses and to
act upon the feedback received
Interaction: Learners in experimental group
responded that their interaction between teacher to
learners and learner to learner was active and
dynamic at the stage of verifying hypothesis
Quality of Learning: Overall quality of learning
was satisfactory and learners have built up the
confidence in differentiate the usage of two korean
expressions with similar semantic function
4 CONCLUSIONS
For Learners’ perspective, anonymity of Clickers
enables learners to express their ideas without the
social risks associated with speaking up in the class.
For Teachers perspective, it enables teachers to
judge the degree of understanding of learners by
showing the number of learners who have selected
the correct answers.
By accommodating learners’ social and
emotional needs in the classroom, Clickers led to a
greater enhancement in the cognitive aspect of
language acquisition. And the experiment showed
that Clicker is a useful tool for promoting learners’
participation and fostering interaction in the
classroom.
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Brown, H.D. (1994), Principles of Language Learning
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Brown, H.D. (2001), Teaching by Principles: An
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Cardoso, W. (2012), “Learning a foreign language with a
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Cutrim Schmid, E.(2007), “Enhancing perfomance
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