Week 3: Task Based Learning


Learning is a fun adventure with WebQuests!

Close your eyes and imagine that you are going for a wonderful trip to England with your students - sounds pretty exciting right? You could visit the great Tower of London, Stonehenge and the royal Buckingham palace. Enjoy the iconic delicious English breakfast in the morning and eat scrumptious scones with clotted cream and jams for tea. There are so many things to see, so many things to do and of course – so many things to plan! I might not be able to help you with the actual trip and grant your wishes like a genie in a magical lamp but I can help you out with the planning. Interested? Want to find out more on how I can help you to do that? Well, let me introduce WebQuests to you!


[Source: YouTube - 'Visit England']

What is a WebQuest?

The homepage for WebQuests website.

According to Dodge (2001, p.7),“a WebQuest is an inquiry-oriented activity in which most or all of the information used by learners is drawn from the Web. WebQuests are designed to use learners' time well, to focus on using information rather than looking for it, and to support learners' thinking at the levels of analysis, synthesis and evaluation.”




[Source: YouTube - 'What is a WebQuest?']


QuestGarden


You can create your own WebQuest on sites such as QuestGarden! Remember that I mentioned something about a trip to England earlier in this blog introduction? Well, the reason is because I am using a QuestGarden titled ‘An English Holiday’  designed by Michelle Malone (Goolsby ES) as an example of how you can use WebQuest for your lesson in this blog. There are seven components known as building blocks in a WebQuest: ‘Introduction’, ‘Task’, ‘Process’, ‘Evaluation’, ‘Conclusion’, ‘Credits’ and ‘Teacher Page’. Together, they act as an internet-based inquiry task for our students to complete in our lesson.


The homepage for QuestGarden website.


The introduction has the important background information to activate your learner's schemata before attempting the WebQuest activity.


A QuestGarden titled 'An English Holiday'


The task contains a description of the WebQuest activity that the students need to complete either individually or in different groups. It is very important to create a task that is suitable and appropriate to your student’s language level.
'An English Holiday': Task Section


The process is a more detailed, step-by-step instructions for our students to follow and guide them in completing the task.



'An English Holiday' WebQuest: Process Section


Also included in the process are resources for our learners to use throughout the task. These resources have been carefully pre-selected by the teachers for the students to use specifically for the task given to them. The resources may include links to website, video or images from the internet that will be useful for the task.
Resources can be chosen and preselected by the teacher to best suit the need of the task for learners.


The evaluation provides the important information for our learners to refer to on how they will be assessed in completing their task.
'An English Holiday' WebQuest: Evaluation Section.


The conclusion is a closing activity to the task and students get to reflect upon what they have learned from completing the task. As teachers, we can also ask for our students’ feedback in this stage and hear their opinions or comments on the task.
The conclusion section. You can get feedbacks from your students at this stage of the lesson. 


Credits’ is a section where we can acknowledge and inform where did we get our sources and right to use the materials (e.g. pictures, videos or reading text) that we have included in our WebQuest activity.
'An English Holiday: Credits'


Finally, the teacher page is dedicated for the WebQuest creator (usually teachers themselves) to talk about the ideas behind their lesson, who are the target users and anything else that they want to include and might be useful for the readers or visitors of their WebQuest page to read.
The final stage is usually called the 'Teacher Page' or the 'Student Page'.

Strengths


In my opinion, there are several strong reasons for teachers to use WebQuests in their lesson:

1.     Language learning through WebQuest revolves around the completion of a meaningful task which is the main idea behind any task-based learning approaches (TBL).

2.     The tasks created for WebQuest provide a real world learning opportunity for our students. The tasks are authentic because they draw from the learner’s real-life experience and knowledge such as browsing the internet for information, making plans for holidays or deciding what kind of food that are healthy and nutritious for them. Students can relate to the topic and find the purpose of the task believable, meaningful and realistic to their everyday life. They will also learn new vocabulary, word or phrase that are related and specific to the task that they are doing.

3.     WebQuest is also a very versatile teaching tool for teachers. With WebQuest, teachers have the power to decide whether they want their learners to do the activity individually or in group. This highlights its strength as a flexible learning tool for being able to support both autonomous and collaborative learnings for all types of learners.

4.     Another important feature of WebQuest that I want to highlight is that it creates a safe environment for our students, especially young learners to use the internet. The resources are age-appropriate because they have been screened and pre-selected for the students to complete the task by the teachers themselves. This will help to avoid our learners from wandering off to any suspicious or untrustworthy websites that they might use for their source of information.


[Source: image by cherylt23 from Pixabay]



Limitations

[Source: image by andreas160578 from Pixabay]

1.     The graphic presentation for WebQuest might seems to be a little old and outdated in comparison to many other new educational software that we have available today. It might not look very attractive to our young learners who are digital natives themselves and are exposed to so many different kinds of websites online. Teachers have to be creative in finding or creating WebQuest pages that are visually interesting for their learners to get them motivated to learn and do the task activity.

2.     Some students, especially young learners might find the different stages and detailed instructions given in WebQuest as too wordy, complicated and monotonous. This might cause them to be uninterested to attempt or even give up halfway from completing the whole task.

3.     Unfortunately, websites dedicated for creating WebQuest such as QuestGarden are not an open source for teachers to use for free. They do offer a 30-day trial period but after it ends, the teachers need to decide if they want to continue their subscriptions or not.

WebQuests: Love 👍 or loathe? 👎


Stocks (2002, p.56) argues that “WebQuests offer good internet-based language learning opportunities because they provide learners with exposure to authentic material, meaningful content and possibilities for real communication in the target language”. So, if you are a teacher who believes in meaningful task-based learning for your learners, then why not give WebQuests a try in your lesson?

Here is a tutorial video from YouTube on how to create your own QuestGarden.





[Source: YouTube - 'Using QuestGarden']

Let me know in the comment section below if you love or loathe the idea of using of WebQuests in your lesson. My final verdict is definitely - LOVE! 💕I am interested to know about your opinions or comments.

References:




Comments

Vera Hannadjia said…
Love the introduction and how you wrote the blog! Very interesting!
Larysa said…
Kamal, you are the best! Your writing style is perfect: easy to read and very informative. I like the way you critically approach each tool describing both its advantages and limitations. The idea of web-quests seems very appealing to me. I am sure it will work well!
Kamal Shafie said…
Thank you so much Vera and Larysa for being so positive and supportive of my blog! I really appreciate your kind words. 🙂
Katie Webb said…
You sure you can't be a Genie - and grant our wishes? I have plenty haha! Great post that explains what a WebQuest is and its advantages
Laura said…
Kamal, thanks for such an informative post :) To be honest, I was a bit confused by WebQuest when we were trying it in our class and your post helped me rethink it in a clearer way - WebQuest definitely has its pros and cons. I totally agree that the old-fashioned layout is a problem haha, which is not appealing for visual animals like me, but the idea of task-based learning is valuable. Thanks again for your generous sharing and I am looking forward to your next post ;)

-Laura
Kamal Shafie said…
Thank you so much Katie and Laura for your positive feedbacks. I really appreciate them!
Qingliu Xia said…
Hi Kamal! This is an amazing post about WebQuest! I like your comments about strengths and limitations in using this tool, and I agree with your point that it creates safe learning environment for students. Looking forward to your next post!

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