http://lattes.cnpq.br/2794806206527152; CONSERVA, Dilma Prata.
Resumo:
Digital Technologies (DT) have been changing the English teaching scenery, our language of
interest. The digital resources and the logic that permeates this insertion in the pedagogical
universe, specifically in this referred field, can contribute to innovate and dynamize the English
teaching as a foreign language, providing the development of pedagogical practices that
contribute to the knowledge construction. With the new possibilities offered by DT, other
pedagogical paths are proposed, such as the flipped classroom, a hybrid teaching model, which
may imply in innovative conditions for structuring English teaching and it is the focus of our
work. Recently, with the adoption of Emergency Remote TeachingERT,
a teaching model used
by innumerous educational institutions during the pandemic context caused by COVID19,
the
role of teachers and students was redifined and consequently brought new demands to education
professionals. Therefore, the general objective of this research is to investigate the
epistemological and methodological implications arising from the flipped classroom for the
remote English language teaching process of a language school. As a result of this, three
specific objectives are proposed: 1. to identify knowledge construction processes for the
Englisg language teaching teaching through the insertion of the flipped classroom methodology
in remote environments; 2. analyze how the methodological guidelines that support the concept
of flipped classroom are manifested in teaching practice in the investigated context. Our work
is an action research with a qualitativeinterpretative
approach and it was carried out in a
language school, in the city of PatosPB,
where we work. The research had as participants 15
beginner students from Basic 1 and Express 1 classes. Our corpus is built by field notes made
by the teacherresearcher,
by the questionnaire, by the messages in the WhatsApp groups of the
respective classes, by the recordings of the classes and by the interview. The generated data
were observed, triangulated and constituted in two categories of analysis: 1) student's
knowledge construction; 2) guiding methodologies of the researcher teacher’s actions. The
discussions are based on the contributions of the Pedagogy of the Multiliteracies conceived by
the New London Group (1996), on the knowledge construction processes of Kalantzis and cope
(2005; 2008), in Kumaravadivelu (1994; 2003; 2012) and Prabhu (1990) conceptions on
language teaching. As well, as on Bergmann and Sams (2016) conceptions about the flipped
classroom, among others. The results show that the knowledge processes were manifested in
different ways which enabled the identification of traits of students' protagonism. We also found
that knowledge can be built and shared anywhere and by different agents.