Publication | Open Access
An account of EFL learners’ self-efficacy and gender in the Flipped Classroom Model
154
Citations
57
References
2020
Year
Second Language LearningEducational PsychologyEducationLanguage EducationStudent OutcomeLanguage LearningLanguage TeachingLanguage ProficiencyElementary EducationTeacher EducationSecond Language AcquisitionSelf-efficacy TheoryStudent LearningLanguage AcquisitionAbstract Emerging TechnologiesLanguage StudiesClassroom PracticeEfl LearnersLearning SciencesStudent-centered LearningFlipped Classroom ModelInstructionPerformance StudiesFlipped Classroom
Abstract Emerging technologies and mobile devices have enabled improved quality of learning outcomes in the field of language learning. With the opportunities provided by innovative, emerging tools, traditional ways of learning have been enhanced. The flipped classroom is one of the innovative learning models that have appeared in language learning in the last decade. The current study was carried out to investigate the difference that the flipped classroom made on students’ self-efficacy and gender. 58 participants with an intermediate proficiency level in English were randomly assigned to one of two conditions: experimental (flipped classroom) and control (traditional) group. The participants employed the Self-Efficacy Survey before and after the intervention of flipped classroom. The results demonstrated a significant increase in self-efficacy scores of the experimental group. When gender was analyzed separately, the females in the experimental group were found to have greater improvements in self-efficacy than their male colleagues in the experimental group when utilizing the flipped classroom practice. In the light of the results, students, especially female students can increase their individual confidence in producing specific or requested performance in language learning while engaged in the flipped classroom.
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