Educational methodologies and didactic audiovisual translation: results of an implementation of combined revoicing and subtitling in a class of primary education with the Montessori method

Among the new methodologies developed to teach the L2, Didactic Audiovisual Translation (DAT) has provento be highly successful as it deals with the four skills in a multimodal environment, which appears to increasemotivation. This paper presents the results of a DAT implementation in an Elementary...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autores: Goñi Alsúa, Edurne, Rejas Vicente, Galder
Formato: artículo
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2025
País:España
Recursos:Universidad Pública de Navarra
Repositorio:Academica-e. Repositorio Institucional de la Universidad Pública de Navarra
OAI Identifier:oai:academica-e.unavarra.es:2454/53792
Acesso em linha:https://hdl.handle.net/2454/53792
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:Didactic Audiovisual Translation (DAT)
Montessori Method
Dubbing
Subtitling
Primary Education
Descrição
Resumo:Among the new methodologies developed to teach the L2, Didactic Audiovisual Translation (DAT) has provento be highly successful as it deals with the four skills in a multimodal environment, which appears to increasemotivation. This paper presents the results of a DAT implementation in an Elementary classroom (11-to-12-year-old children) in a school which follows the Montessori Method. Twenty-four children, divided intogroups of four, chose their favourite scenes from the TV seriesGoenkale(broadcast on the Basque channelEuskal Televista 1) and translated, dubbed and subtitled them from their L1, Basque, into the L2, English,by means of the tool VideoPad. As Montessori Pedagogy does not include tests, the authors could not followthe experimental scheme of pre and post-test to observe any improvement in language acquisition. Data wastherefore collected by the teacher, and subsequently analysed considering the mistakes made by the pupilsduring the process. Pupils additionally completed a questionnaire, which indicated high levels of satisfactiontowards this approach, thereby opening a new didactic path within Montessori Methodology.