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Dynamics of the Flipped EFL Classroom at a Middle School in Korea: A Complexity Theory Perspective : 한국 중학교 거꾸로영어교실의 역동성: 복잡계 이론 관점

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dc.contributor.advisor이병민-
dc.contributor.author임성희-
dc.date.accessioned2018-11-12T00:55:58Z-
dc.date.available2018-11-12T00:55:58Z-
dc.date.issued2018-08-
dc.identifier.other000000153401-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/143088-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 사범대학 외국어교육과(영어전공), 2018. 8. 이병민.-
dc.description.abstractThe Flipped Classroom (hereafter, FC) (Bergmann & Sams, 2012, 2014) has been widely implemented and has received increasing attention within the educational community. Correspondingly, the FC is proposed as a means of educational reformation. This study adopts ethnography as a fundamental research approach with an attempt to obtain a holistic understanding of the EFL classroom and its process of implementing the FC as it is. Moreover, complexity theory (Larsen-Freeman, 1997) is adopted as a theoretical framework to disclose the complex nature of an EFL classroom. By understanding the classroom as a complex adaptive system (hereafter, CAS), the study searches to capture some of the dynamic features of the classroom at a given point in time and its process of change holistically across time during the entire period of the FC implementation. The posed research questions are (1) What happens in the Korean EFL Classroom (hereafter, KEC) after implementing the FC for a semester?, (2) Are there any changes observed in the Korean flipped EFL classroom (hereafter, KFEC) across time?, and (3) If any changes occur, what triggers such changes in the KFEC and why?

This study was conducted in four English classes of grade 7 taught by the same teacher for one semester. The English teacher and her students were the participants of this study. During the 17 weeks of research, 39 classroom participant observation sessions and 56 occasions of interviews, and 137 files of video footage and audio recordings were gathered at research site. The data was analyzed inductively followed by the disciplines of constant comparative method (Glaser & Strauss, 1967), and NVivo (2012) was used during the data analysis.

The findings from this study are displayed in threefold: (1) changes of the KFEC at a given time (2) factors of either sustaining or triggering changes and (3) the changing process of the KFEC over time. First, the changes of the KFEC are indicated in four stages: Initial Conditions, Phase Shift One, Phase Shift Two, and Phase Shift Three.

The initial conditions illustrated a typical English class at a Korean middle school. This original state of the KEC displayed: a teacher-centered classroom, a vicious circle of having habitual stimuli and rewards from in-class game activities, and a dual track system of perceiving completely distinctive strategies on studying English in class and on preparing for an exam. Phase Shift One illustrated the expansion of interactional space and scope, both synchronously and asynchronously, brought into the classroom after exporting lectures out of the classroom and providing them as short video files on SNS. Phase Shift Two delineated a phenomenon where the teacher reached out to every student in every classroom. In all instances, the teacher had each student perform learning activities, which were independently tailored to the specific needs of each respective student in the classroom setting. By personalizing the student learning experience with a diverse range of multilevel classroom activities, another dynamic change disclosed in the Flipped EFL Classroom system manifested: the mentality is changed from a one-size-fits-all to an all-sizes-fits-one. Then, this whole process of phase shifting asserts itself as a process of retaining equilibrium between stability and variety in the Flipped EFL Classroom system, which is related to the interconnectedness of the complex adaptive system. A surprising case was also noted in which there was an increase of student willingness to communicate in English after uncovering the meaning of self within society and having opportunities to express that in English. Finally, yet perhaps most importantly, Phase Shift Three exhibited the most complex and dynamic features of the Flipped EFL Classroom system both in terms of participation patterns and English language use. By converging two different subjects–math and EFL– students link various content knowledge and enrich their English language resources. Furthermore, this causes a virtuous cycle that widened the scope of the students linguistic resources and stimulated the students to participate in more frequent and lengthened interaction. Then, again, this enabled them to retain more linguistic resources through interaction, whereby a continuous language development cycle was established. This phenomenon was interpreted with the openness and dynamism of the KFEC system wherein the system broke barriers within the subjects, and led to new patterns of interaction through co-adaptation, self-organization, and emergence.

Based on the findings, this study explains a working principle of the FC (i.e. from a closed Korean EFL Classroom system to an open Korean Flipped EFL Classroom system) and the detailed process of the FC implementation in the KFEC. Furthermore, some pedagogical implications and recommendations for future research are suggested.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsCHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1

1.1 Background of the Study 2

1.1.1 Context of the Study 2

1.1.2 Researchers Motive and Position 8

1.2 The Purpose of the Study 13

1.3 Research Questions 14

1.4 The Organization of the Dissertation 15

CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE REVIEW 17

2.1 Flipped Classroom 17

2.1.1 A Synopsis of the Flipped Classroom 17

2.1.2 The Flipped Classroom in Research 20

2.1.3 The Flipped Classroom in EFL Classroom Research 23

2.2 Classroom Research in SLA 27

2.2.1 A Cognitively-Oriented Approach 28

2.2.2 A Socially-Oriented Approach 30

2.3 Complexity Theory: Theory and Research in SLA 33

2.3.1 Complexity Theory in SLA 33

2.3.2 Complexity Theory in Research of a Second/Foreign Language Classroom 36

CHAPTER 3 METHODOLOGY 41

3.1 Research Approach 42

3.1.1 Methodical Approach: Ethnographically-Oriented Approach 42

3.1.2 Theoretical Framework: A Complex Adaptive System Approach 45

3.1.2.1 Complexity Thought Modeling: The Flipped EFL Classroom as a Complex Adaptive System 46

3.2 Research Setting 52

3.2.1 Site 52

3.2.2 Participants 56

3.2.3 The Role of the Researcher 57

3.3 Data Collection 58

3.3.1 Classroom Observation 59

3.3.2 Interviews 63

3.3.3 Other Documents and Artifacts 64

3.4 Data Analysis 66

3.5 Limitations and Delimitations 67

3.5.1 Limitations 67

3.5.2 Delimitations 68

3.6 Trustworthiness 69

3.7 Ethical Considerations 70

CHAPTER 4 INITIAL CONDITIONS: PRE-FLIPPED CLASSROOM 72

4.1 Organization of Findings: Chapter 4 to 7 72

4.2 Initial Conditions: Pre-Flipped Classroom 74

4.3 Snapshot One: A Typical Classroom Day 75

4.4 The Korean EFL Classroom 80

4.4.1 Timespan and Classroom Materials 80

4.4.2 The Elements of the Korean EFL Classroom 81

4.4.3 Between Ideology and Practice: English Learning in the Korean Secondary Classroom 85

4.4.3.1 The Teacher-Centered Classroom 86

4.4.3.2 A Vicious Circle: Habitual Stimuli and Rewards 93

4.4.3.3 Dual Track System 98

4.5 Summary of Initial Conditions 103

CHAPTER 5 PHASE SHIFT 1: FLIPPED CLASSROOM 101, ELIMINATING CLASSROOM LECTURES 105

5.1 Snapshot Two and Three: Emerging into a New World, NAVER BAND 105

5.1.1 Asynchronous Space: NAVER BAND Classroom 106

5.1.2 Synchronous Space: In Classroom 109

5.2 The First Emergence of the KFEC: Expansion and Chaos 112

5.2.1 Timespan and Classroom Materials 112

5.2.2 The Elements of the KFEC : Physical Environment, Contextual Factors, and Language Resources 114

5.2.3 Expanding Interactional Space and Scope 125

5.2.3.1 Expansion in the Classroom: Whenever, Wherever, As Many As I Want To 125

5.2.3.2 Expansion in Interaction: The Rebirth of Chatter 129

5.3 Summary of Phase Shift One: 134

CHAPTER 6 PHASE SHIFT 2: ONE-SIZE-FITS-ALL NO, ALL-SIZES-FIT-ONE! 135

6.1 Snapshot Four: Multilevel Classroom 135

6.2 The Second Transformation of the KFEC: The Equilibrium of Stability and Variety 140

6.2.1 Timespan and Classroom Materials 140

6.2.2 The Elements of the KFEC: Teacher, Language Resources, Students, Physical Environment, and Contextual Factors 143

6.2.3 Bridging Meaningfulness of Self to Meaningfulness of Learning English 149

6.2.3.1 Meaningfulness of Self 149

6.2.3.1.1 Knowing Me, Knowing You 149

6.2.3.2 Meaningfulness of Learning English 154

6.2.3.2.1 Group Work for Learning 154

6.2.3.2.2 All-Sizes-Fit-One 155

6.3 Summary of Phase Shift 2 156

CHAPTER 7 PHASE SHIFT 3: OPEN PLATFORM, EXTENDING BEYOND A TYPICAL KOREAN EFL CLASSROOM 157

7.1 Snapshot Five: Converging with Other Subjects 157

7.2 The Third Transformation of the KFEC: Emergence of a New Classroom 163

7.2.1 Timespan and Classroom Materials 165

7.2.2 The Elements of the KFEC: Language Resources, Teacher, Students, and Physical Environment 167

7.2.3 Learning by Doing is Being 173

7.2.3.1 Breaking Walls 173

7.2.3.2 Learning by Playing 176

7.3 Summary of Phase Shift 3 180

CHAPTER 8 The TRIGGERS OF TRANSFORMATIONS: the Korean Flipped EFL Classroom 182

8.1 The Transformations of the KFEC 183

8.1.1 The Elements of Initial Conditions 185

8.1.2 The Elements of Phase Shift One 189

8.1.3 The Elements of Phase Shift Two 192

8.1.4 The Elements of Phase Shift Three 195

8.2 The Triggers of the Transformations 198

8.2.1 Initial Conditions to Phase Shift One: Toward Chaos 199

8.2.2 Phase Shift One to Two: Finding Stability and Scaling up with Variability 204

8.2.3 Phase Shift Two to Three: Emerging into a New System 206

8.3 The Trajectory of the KFEC System 210

8.3.1 The Transforming Path of the KFEC System 210

8.3.2 Openness: From a Closed- KFEC System to an Open-KFEC System 213

CHAPTER 9 CONCLUSION 219

9.1 Contribution of the Present Study 219

9.2 Suggestions for Reconceptualization of EFL Learning and Teaching 226

9.3 Pedagogical Implications 229

9.4 Recommendations for Future Research 230

9.5 Epilogue: What is Next 232

REFERENCES 236

APPENDICES 255
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dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subject.ddc420.7-
dc.titleDynamics of the Flipped EFL Classroom at a Middle School in Korea: A Complexity Theory Perspective-
dc.title.alternative한국 중학교 거꾸로영어교실의 역동성: 복잡계 이론 관점-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.contributor.AlternativeAuthorLim, Sung Hee-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.contributor.affiliation사범대학 외국어교육과(영어전공)-
dc.date.awarded2018-08-
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