Comparing Teacher Priorities and Student Uptake in EMI Lectures: An Exploratory Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
2.1. Second Language Listening
2.2. EMI Lecture Listening
2.3. Challenges in Learning in EMI Lectures
2.4. Challenges in Teaching in EMI Lectures
2.5. The Swedish EMI Context
2.6. Research Questions
3. Methods
3.1. Participants
3.2. Data Collection and Analysis Procedures
- Lecturer A:
- “so organizational social structure that would be relationship among people who assume the roles of the organisation. And the organisational groups or units to which they belong, like departments, divisions, etc.”
- Lecturer A:
- “So … and there can be … core technology, there can be service technology, there can be different types of technologies and you … you will see in the chapter there are different ways to conceptualize it.”
4. Findings
Overview of Lectures
Student 7 (Other L1 group): “incorporation of technologies within an organization and reflecting on it from positive and negative perspectives how an organization can be organized (flat, steep hierarchy etc.) where to put the sustainability administration body.”
Student 3 (Other L1): “different types of structure within organizations (social, physical...) webers bureaucratical view (pros and cons) technology impact on society (pros and cons).”
Student 4 (L1 Swedish): “A more in depth view in how organization might work and what potential future they may behold.”
Student 10 (L1 Swedish): “Different heuristics searches, Breadth first search, Depth first search, greedy search. Manhattan distance. We ended with slightly go through A* search.”
Student 5 (L1 Swedish): “Basis uninformed search; BFS, DFS, Iterative serpentins search. Informed search; Greedy, A*.”
Student 4 (L1 Swedish): “Path planning, BFS and DFS algorithms, Heuristic search algorithms.”
Student 9 (Other L1s): “different algorithms.”
Student 2 (L1 Swedish): “Fuzzy rules compared to standard rules -fuzzy sets and -Fuzzy stimulus.”
Student 9 (L1 Swedish): “We talked about fuzzy-stimuli and how to calculate different values depending on what kind of statement the exercise was.”
Student 10: (L1 Swedish): “Fuzzy logic not being much different from other logic in a purely mathematical view. IR Sensors on the epuck robots are bad.”
5. Discussion
Limitations
6. Implications and Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lecturer A’s First Main Idea (12 September) | Key Word Identification | Example 1 of Student Responses including the KW | Example 2 of Student Responses including the KW |
Concepts of social structure and technology within organizational studies | “organizational” or any derivative | “differentiation, integration, organization social structure, the organization as a technical system” | “differentiation organizational structure(vertical horizontal)” |
Lecturer A’s Second Main Idea (12 September) | Key Word Identification | Example 1 of Student Responses including the KW | Example of Student Responses NOT including the KW |
Basic understanding of different theories and perspectives focused on social structure and technology | “technology” or any derivative | “Intensive technologies, risk and organizational social structures” | “A more in depth view in how organization might work and what potential future they may behold” |
Lecture 1 Main Points (n = 10 Students) | Key Words | Ratio of Reported Key Words (Total) | L1 Swedish | L1 Other than Swedish |
---|---|---|---|---|
Concept of organizational environment | Organizational | 6/10 | 1/3 | 5/7 |
Overview and basics of different theories, organizational theories, organizational environment | Environment | 4/10 | 2/3 | 2/7 |
Ideas and reflections on how to apply theories to sustainability management, issues and challenges | Theory(ies) Sustainability | 5/10 6/10 | 3/3 0/3 | 2/7 6/7 |
Overall ratios | 21/40 (53%) | 6/12 (50%) | 15/28 (54%) |
Lecture 2 Main Points (n = 7 Students) | Key Words | Ratio of Reported Key Words (Total) | L1 Swedish | L1 Other than Swedish |
---|---|---|---|---|
Concepts of Social structure and technology within organizational studies | Social Structure Organizational | 3/7 4/7 6/7 | 1/3 1/3 2/3 | 2/4 3/4 4/4 |
Basic understanding of different theories and perspectives focused on social structure and technology | Technology | 4/7 | 1/3 | 3/4 |
Ideas and reflections on how to apply theories to sustainability management, issues and challenges (same as 11 September, but different content) | Sustainability | 1/7 | 0/3 | 1/4 |
Overall ratios | 18/35 (51%) | 4/15 (27%) | 14/20 (70%) |
Lecture 3 Main Points (n = 14 Students) | Key Words | Ratio of Reported Key Words (Total) | L1 Swedish | L1 Other than Swedish |
---|---|---|---|---|
Feedback control (or closed-loop control) is a general concept that applies to “systems” in many fields: biology, medicine, economics, engineering, etc. | Feedback Loop Control | 6/14 3/14 7/14 | 6/10 3/10 6/10 | 0/4 0/4 1/4 |
It is important to clearly define: the system, its inputs, its outputs | Define Input Output | 0/14 0/14 0/14 | 0/10 0/10 0/10 | 0/4 0/4 0/4 |
In the case of robot motion control (go-to) the “system” is not just the robot, but the robot together with its environment | Go Robot Environment | 3/14 5/14 0/14 | 1/10 4/10 0/10 | 2/4 1/4 0/4 |
In robotics, it is important to distinguish between the “work space” and the “joint space” | Space | 0/14 | 0/10 | 0/4 |
Overall ratios | 22/140 (15.8%) | 20/100 (20%) | 4/40 (10%) |
Lecture 4 Main Points (n = 14 Students) | Key Words | Ratio of Reported Key Words (Total) | L1 Swedish | L1 Other than Swedish |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rule-based systems is a technique from AI that allows us to encode “human knowledge” into a machine. | Rule-based System | 12/14 4/14 | 9/11 4/11 | 3/3 0/3 |
We can use rule-based systems to encode “human knowledge” about how to control a physical system, e.g., a robot. | Encode Human Knowledge | 0/14 0/14 0/14 | 0/11 0/11 0/11 | 0/3 0/3 0/3 |
In a rule-based controller, one can implement strategies that are too complex to encode in a PID controller, e.g., for obstacle avoidance. | PID Avoidance | 2/14 3/14 | 2/11 3/11 | 0/3 0/3 |
Overall ratios | 21/98 (21%) | 18/77 (23%) | 3/21 (14%) |
Lecture 5 Main Points (n = 11 Students) | Key Words | Ratio of Reported Key Words (Total) | L1 Swedish | L1 Other than Swedish |
---|---|---|---|---|
Fuzzy sets allow us to represent “graded” membership in sets, and properties that have “degrees”. | Fuzzy Graded Membership Degrees | 11/11 0/11 0/11 0/11 | 8/8 0/8 0/8 0/8 | 3/3 0/3 0/3 0/3 |
Fuzzy sets are simply extensions of standard sets: everything you can do with standard sets, you can do with fuzzy sets. | Standard | 1/11 | 1/8 | 0/3 |
Using fuzzy sets in rule based control leads to smoother control and smoother behavior of the robot. | Rule-based Control | 4/11 2/11 | 2/8 1/8 | 2/3 1/3 |
Overall ratios | 18/77 (23%) | 12/56 (21%) | 6/24 (25%) |
Lecture 6 Main Points (n = 10 Students) | Key Words | Ratio of Reported Key Words (Total) | L1 Swedish | L1 Other than Swedish |
---|---|---|---|---|
Planning is based on “mental simulation” of future states and actions | Planning Simulation | 4/10 0/10 | 3/7 0/7 | 1/3 0/3 |
Breadth-first search is good because it is complete and optimal, but it can be slow | Breadth-first | 6/10 | 5/7 | 1/3 |
Heuristic search can be fast, provided you can define a good heuristic function | Heuristic | 4/10 | 4/7 | 0/3 |
Overall ratios | 14/40 (35%) | 12/28 (43%) | 2/12 (17%) |
Data | c (72, 44) out of c (288, 117) |
95% Confidence Interval | 0.01 0.22 |
p-value | 0.015 * |
Prop 1 | 0.37 |
Prop 2 | 0.25 |
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Siegel, J. Comparing Teacher Priorities and Student Uptake in EMI Lectures: An Exploratory Study. Languages 2022, 7, 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010039
Siegel J. Comparing Teacher Priorities and Student Uptake in EMI Lectures: An Exploratory Study. Languages. 2022; 7(1):39. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010039
Chicago/Turabian StyleSiegel, Joseph. 2022. "Comparing Teacher Priorities and Student Uptake in EMI Lectures: An Exploratory Study" Languages 7, no. 1: 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010039
APA StyleSiegel, J. (2022). Comparing Teacher Priorities and Student Uptake in EMI Lectures: An Exploratory Study. Languages, 7(1), 39. https://doi.org/10.3390/languages7010039