Increasing students’ oral production through meaningful learning: a pedagogical proposal with a second semester of a university from the modern languages program.

This research focuses on the development of oral production through meaningful learning, which is based on authors like Ausubel, Novak, and Hanesian (1978) who designed the "theory of meaningful learning", the first systematic model of cognitive learning. First of all, meaningful learning...

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Autores:
Fernández Jaramillo, Diana Carolina
Tipo de recurso:
Trabajo de grado de pregrado
Fecha de publicación:
2020
Institución:
Universidad del Quindío
Repositorio:
Repositorio Universidad del Quindío
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:bdigital.uniquindio.edu.co:001/6303
Acceso en línea:
https://bdigital.uniquindio.edu.co/handle/001/6303
Palabra clave:
Rights
openAccess
License
Derechos reservados Universidad del Quindío
Description
Summary:This research focuses on the development of oral production through meaningful learning, which is based on authors like Ausubel, Novak, and Hanesian (1978) who designed the "theory of meaningful learning", the first systematic model of cognitive learning. First of all, meaningful learning can be defined as the connection between new information to previous knowledge, that is to say, the lived experiences that the student relates to the new concepts to facilitate their understanding and application. Such is the case of Fink (2013) who developed a meaningful learning taxonomy that offers teachers specific learning objectives that go beyond comprehension. In the practice of teaching, significant learning manifests different ways taking into account the context of the student and the experiences that each learner relates to in their learning process. For this reason, it is essential to use methods applicable to oral production of students because there are cases in which they show a poor oral fluency in classroom activities, such as simple communication exercises between classmates. In fact, strengthening the oral ability it is considered as one of the most important communicative skills since students need to produce the target language, and more if they can do it by listening to each other, without neglecting reading, writing, and listening during the acquisition process.