英文摘要 |
Indigenous language has the characteristics of cultural preservation, diversity, scarcity and oral communication in heritage, in the language learning process, indigenous learners need to learn along with culture and traditional knowledge in addition to understanding vocabularies and grammars. The present study is the first review study related to technology-supported indigenous language learning. There are totally 55 articles published from 1997 to 2019 in the target journals. The researchers of the present study conducted analyzed the publications using qualitative coding for content analysis. The learning results that affect the “target language”, “curriculum or content learning”, information and communication technology mainly include “higher-order thinking or competence”, “behavior development or change” and “affective or psychological state”. Owing to the fact that many L1 languages are “endangered language”, “vocabulary” related to creative learning methods causing “creativity” has the most increasing growth on “high-order thinking or competence”. “Tech-supported linguistic interaction” of “behavior development or change” accounted for the greatest number. “empathy related” is the most often mentioned sub-item in the studies, followed by “general perceptions or attitudes” and “technology acceptance/evaluation.” As far as each item of the second stage is concerned, the literature number of “collaborative competence” research ranks first, followed by “communicative competence”. In terms of formal and informal curriculum, the “cross-level” consists of integrating in and out of class learning with emphasis on traditional knowledge accounted for the greatest number, the subsequent part falls on the “elementary school” stage, focusing on various language acquisition methods. “scaffolding” of “teaching strategy” is the most commonly used strategy, followed by “bilingual-bicultural”. Therefore, emphasizing the differences between indigenous traditional knowledge and non-western sciences; using creativity to learn mother tongue; adopting strategies such as scaffolding in two-way learning courses; and teaching cognition that values identity and ideology are important contributions to this research. |