Title
Blog-Assisted Learning in the ESL Writing Classroom: A Phenomenological Analysis.
Abstract
This study explores the experiences of a group of Taiwanese ESL student writers on a course of study that used a blog-assisted language learning (BALL) methodology. Data from in-depth interviews with eight participants were studied qualitatively using a phenomenological method of analysis. Participants' blogging activities were found to be inhibited by low L2 proficiency levels, by feelings of anxiety and embarrassment about possible peer reactions to their work, and by the slow pace at which completed compulsory blogging tasks were completed. It is argued that these findings help to explain the observation made in a number of previous studies, that second language writing students are enthusiastic about BALL in principle, but are not motivated to engage voluntarily in second language blogging activities in practice. The paper concludes by offering suggestions for ameliorating the problems identified in our analysis, and by identifying avenues for further research.
Year
Venue
Keywords
2013
EDUCATIONAL TECHNOLOGY & SOCIETY
Classroom blogging,Blog-assisted language learning,ESL writing,Phenomenological analysis
Field
DocType
Volume
Pace,Phenomenology (philosophy),Anxiety,Second language writing,Psychology,Language acquisition,Pedagogy,Feeling,Embarrassment,Interpretative phenomenological analysis
Journal
16
Issue
ISSN
Citations 
3
1436-4522
2
PageRank 
References 
Authors
0.45
4
3
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Ming-Huei Lin120.78
Nicholas Groom220.45
Chin-Ying Lin361.01