PROJECT-BASED LEARNING COLLABORATED WITH DIGITAL MEDIA FOR INDONESIAN EFL LEARNERS’ SELF-CONFIDENCE AND COMMUNICATION SKILL
Main Article Content
Abstract
Indonesian EFL learners are still unconvinced to communicate by using English because being able to communicate requires the students to integrate self-confidence, and producing the meaningful idea at the same time. Fortunately, digital stuffs completely brings a new concept in ELT context since the use of digital in ELT clasroom can improve EFL learners’ communication skill. This research aims to reveal Indonesian EFL learners’ communication skill by integrating Project-based learning and digital media to siginificantly affect on students’ self-confidence on communication skill. To achieve the objective of the research, quantitative research method with factorial design 2X2 is applied. Then, the intruments used are interview with Likert scale and students’ communication achievement that have been distributed both normally and homogenously, thus, all the data are processed by using multivariate anova with sig 0,000 < 0,05. Based on the finding of the research, it is found that the using of Project-based Learning integrated with Telegram as media digital to share video absolutely affects on students’ communication skill because the students are able to think deeply in creating video project and feel comfortable to share with others on Telegram twice a week, it indicates that familiarity with their interlocutors and the community existed on Telegram group leads them to prefectly communicate with other in the real classroom context, and allows them to improve the ability to produce a meaningful idea to deliver.
Downloads
Article Details
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
By submitting the article/manuscript of the article, the author(s) agree with this policy. No specific document sign-off is required.
1. License
The article will be governed by the Creative Commons Attribution license as currently displayed on Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
2. Author(s)' Warranties
The author warrants that the article is original, written by stated author(s), has not been published before, contains no unlawful statements, does not infringe the rights of others, is subject to copyright that is vested exclusively in the author and free of any third party rights, and that any necessary written permissions to quote from other sources have been obtained by the author(s).
3. User Rights
JPPT's spirit is to disseminate articles published are as free as possible. Under the Creative Commons license, EJPRM permits users to copy, distribute, display, and perform the work. Users will also need to attribute authors and JPPT to distributing works in the journal and other media of publications.
4. Rights of Authors
Authors retain all their rights to the published works, such as (but not limited to) the following rights;
- Copyright and other proprietary rights relating to the article, such as patent rights,
- The right to use the substance of the article in own future works, including lectures and books,
- The right to reproduce the article for own purposes,
- The right to self-archive the article,
- The right to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the article's published version (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal.
5. Co-Authorship
If the article was jointly prepared by more than one author, any authors submitting the manuscript warrants that he/she has been authorized by all co-authors to be agreed on this copyright and license notice (agreement) on their behalf, and agrees to inform his/her co-authors of the terms of this policy. JPPT will not be held liable for anything that may arise due to the author(s) internal dispute. JPPT will only communicate with the corresponding author.
6. Royalties
Being an open accessed journal and disseminating articles for free under the Creative Commons license term mentioned, author(s) aware that JPPT entitles the author(s) to no royalties or other fees.
7. Miscellaneous
JPPT will publish the article (or have it published) in the journal if the article’s editorial process is successfully completed. JPPT's editors may modify the article to a style of punctuation, spelling, capitalization, referencing and usage that deems appropriate. The author acknowledges that the article may be published so that it will be publicly accessible and such access will be free of charge for the readers as mentioned in point 3.
References
Biswas, S. (2012). Schoology-supported classroom management: A curriculum review. Northwest Journal of Teacher Education. 11(2), 12.
Chhabra, P. (2013). Use of E-Learning tools in teaching English. International Journal of Computing & Business Research. 3. 2229-6166.
Eskrootchi, R. and Oskrochi, G. R.(2010). A study of the efficacy of project-based learning integrated with computer-based simulation-STELLA. Educational Technology & Society. 13(1), 236-245.
Ghasemi, A. A., Ahmadian, M., Yazdani, H., & Amerian, M. (2020). Towards a Model of Intercultural Communicative Competence in Iranian EFL Context: Testing the Role of International Posture, Ideal L2 Self, L2 Self-Confidence, and Metacognitive Strategies. Journal of Intercultural Communication Research, 49(1), 41-60.
Lou, N. M., & A. Noels, K. (2018). Western and heritage cultural internalizations predict EFL students’ language motivation and confidence. International Journal of Bilingual Education and Bilingualism, 1-15.
Lubis, N., & Lubis, A. (2019, April). Enhancing 21st Century Skill through Teaching Model Collaboration in Indonesian EFL Classroom. In 3rd Asian Education Symposium (AES 2018). Atlantis Press.
Lubis, N., Lubis, A., & Ashadi, R. I. (2018). Integrating Teaching Models to Enhance Efl Students’ Interpersonal Communication Skill and Creativity. International Journal of Education and Literacy Studies, 6(4), 129-137.
Lee, Ju Seong. (2019). EFL students’ views of willingness to communicate in the extramural digital context. Computer Assisted Language Learning. 32(7), 692-712.
Manivone Phongsa, Shaik Abdul Malik Mohamed Ismail & Hui Min Low .(2018). Multilingual effects on EFL learning: a comparison of foreign language anxiety experienced by monolingual and bilingual tertiary students in the Lao PDR. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development. 39(3), 271-282.
Mansoor Tavakoli & Nourollah Zarrinabadi. (2018). Differential effects of explicit and implicit corrective feedback on EFL learners’ willingness to communicate. Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching, 12(3), 247-259.
Martin-Rubió, X., & Cots, J. M. (2018). Self-confidence amongst study abroad students in an ‘English as a lingua franca’university. Language awareness, 27(1-2), 96-112.
Maulany, Darini Bilqis. (2013). The Use of Project-based Learning in Improving the StudentsSpeaking Skill (a Classroom Action Research at One of Primary Schools in Bandung). Journal of English and Education. 1(1), 30-42.
Mohammad Javad Riasati & Forough Rahimi & Xiaofei Lu (Reviewing editor). (2018). Situational and individual factors engendering willingness to speak English in foreign language classrooms. Cogent Education. 5(1).
Moreira, M. A. (2019). Project-based language learning with technology: learner collaboration in an EFL classroom in Japan.
Özsoy, G., & Ataman, A. (2017). The effect of metacognitive strategy training on mathematical problem solving achievement. International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 1(2), 67-82.
Rintaro, S. (2019). Fluctuations in an EFL teacher’s willingness to communicate in an English-medium lesson: an observational case study in Japan. Innovation in Language Learning and Teaching. 13(2), 105-117.
Tiantong, Monchai, and Sumalee Siksen. (2013). The online project-based learning model based on student’s multiple intelligence. International Journal of Humanities and Social Science. 3(7), 204-211.
Yihong Gao, Zengyan Jia & Yan Zhou. (2015). EFL Learning and Identity Development: A Longitudinal Study in 5 Universities in China. Journal of Language, Identity & Education. 14(3), 137-158.