Effects of flipped language classrooms on learning outcomes in higher education: A Bayesian meta-analysis

1Citations
Citations of this article
36Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Despite accumulated evidence demonstrating the effectiveness of flipped language classrooms in higher education, there is no quantitative examination of the extant empirical studies to draw a general conclusion. Based on Bayesian methodologies and 26 effect sizes, this study quantitatively examines empirical studies that investigated flipped language classrooms’ effects on learning outcomes in higher education. Our results indicate a large overall effect in favour of the effectiveness of flipped language classrooms. Subgroup analyses indicated that intervention duration, target languages, outcome types, allocation, and school locations were significantly related to the variability in language learning outcomes. A low risk of publication bias was identified. This study concluded that the flipped language classroom was a promising pedagogical approach to promoting language learning. Findings provided insights into an evidence-informed application of flipped language classrooms, for example: (1) sufficient face-to-face time to maximise the effectiveness of flipped language classrooms; (2) making flipped design adjustments based on student responses during long-term intervention; (3) giving students pre-training of flipped language classrooms and showing them the underlying benefits; (4) flipping basic contents of language learning and teaching complex contents face-to-face; and (5) adopting scaffolding strategies like code-switching to scaffold lower achievers. Implications for practice or policy: ● Instructors should flip writing and speaking courses with enough face-to-face time and technical support being provided to students. ● Instructors should consider time variance’s effects on learning performance and seek ways to maintain learners’ interest. ● Instructors should pre-train learners of flipped learning before implementation. ● Instructors should include practices, quizzes, and asynchronous online interaction tools in pre-class activities to check learners’ understandings and promote interaction and feedback provision.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Chen, X., Zou, D., Cheng, G., Xie, H., & Su, F. (2023). Effects of flipped language classrooms on learning outcomes in higher education: A Bayesian meta-analysis. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 39(2), 65–97. https://doi.org/10.14742/ajet.8019

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free