A definition of CALL
Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL) is often perceived,
somewhat narrowly, as an approach to language teaching and learning in
which the computer is used as an aid to the presentation, reinforcement
and assessment of material to be learned, usually including a
substantial
interactive element. Levy (
1997:1)
defines CALL more succinctly and more broadly as "the search for and
study of applications of the computer in language teaching and
learning". Levy's definition is in line with the view held by the
majority of modern CALL practitioners. For a comprehensive overview of
CALL see ICT4LT Module 1.4,
Introduction to Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL):
http://www.ict4lt.org/.
A brief history of CALL
CALL's origins can be traced back to the 1960s. Up until the late
1970s CALL projects were confined mainly to universities, where computer
programs were developed on large mainframe computers. The PLATO
project, initiated at the University of Illinois in 1960, is an
important landmark in the early development of CALL (
Marty 1981). In the late 1970s, the arrival of the
personal computer
(PC) brought computing within the range of a wider audience, resulting
in a boom in the development of CALL programs and a flurry of
publications. Early CALL favoured an approach that drew heavily on
practices associated with
programmed instruction. This was
reflected in the term Computer Assisted Language Instruction (CALI),
which originated in the USA and was in common use until the early 1980s,
when CALL became the dominant term. There was initially a lack of
imagination and skill on the part of programmers, a situation that was
rectified to a considerable extent by the publication of an influential
seminal work by Higgins & Johns (
1984),
which contained numerous examples of alternative approaches to CALL.
Throughout the 1980s CALL widened its scope, embracing the
communicative approach and a range of new technologies. CALL has now established itself as an important area of
research in higher education: see the joint EUROCALL/CALICO/IALLT Research Policy Statement:
http://www.eurocall-languages.org
/research/research_policy.htm. See also the History of CALL website:
http://www.history-of-call.org/.
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