Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club

The present paper reports on the findings from the first four years of an ongoing, longitudinal study which examines the experiences and perceptions of Polish college participants in the International Book Club, an extension of a campus common read program at an American university. More specifical...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emerson Case, Agnieszka Kaczmarek, Sebastian Zatylny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Silesia Press 2024-03-01
Series:Theory and Practice of Second Language Acquisition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/TAPSLA/article/view/14630
_version_ 1827318275335258112
author Emerson Case
Agnieszka Kaczmarek
Sebastian Zatylny
author_facet Emerson Case
Agnieszka Kaczmarek
Sebastian Zatylny
author_sort Emerson Case
collection DOAJ
description The present paper reports on the findings from the first four years of an ongoing, longitudinal study which examines the experiences and perceptions of Polish college participants in the International Book Club, an extension of a campus common read program at an American university. More specifically, the paper examines participants’ experiences with the book, both inside and outside the classroom, and examines their opinions about the issues discussed in each year’s book selection, their attitudes toward that issue and whether or not their attitude toward the issue was changed through this experience, their attitudes toward public discussions and whether or not their attitude toward public discussions was changed through this experience, and whether or not reading the book and participating in the club helped to improve their English-speaking abilities. Quantitative data, in the form of a nine-statement survey, and qualitative data, in the form of a nine-question open-ended questionnaire, were collected and analyzed. While a great deal of the literature on common read programs has explored the experiences of participants within the North American context, there is a dearth of research outside of that context, including the Polish context. The present study attempts to ameliorate this situation. The main findings from the study show that, overall, participants enjoyed the experience of reading the book and that participation in the program has been beneficial for them, including getting them to read more, to engage in discussions more, to think more deeply about more diverse topics and issues, and perhaps most importantly, to im­prove their English language abilities.
first_indexed 2024-04-24T23:55:21Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a6f4a1b56e9e48df950740d2271fa2b5
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2450-5455
2451-2125
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-24T23:55:21Z
publishDate 2024-03-01
publisher University of Silesia Press
record_format Article
series Theory and Practice of Second Language Acquisition
spelling doaj.art-a6f4a1b56e9e48df950740d2271fa2b52024-03-14T13:58:47ZengUniversity of Silesia PressTheory and Practice of Second Language Acquisition2450-54552451-21252024-03-0110.31261/TAPSLA.14630Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book ClubEmerson Case0Agnieszka Kaczmarek1Sebastian Zatylny2California State University in BakersfieldUniversity of Applied Sciences in NysaUniversity of Applied Sciences in Nysa The present paper reports on the findings from the first four years of an ongoing, longitudinal study which examines the experiences and perceptions of Polish college participants in the International Book Club, an extension of a campus common read program at an American university. More specifically, the paper examines participants’ experiences with the book, both inside and outside the classroom, and examines their opinions about the issues discussed in each year’s book selection, their attitudes toward that issue and whether or not their attitude toward the issue was changed through this experience, their attitudes toward public discussions and whether or not their attitude toward public discussions was changed through this experience, and whether or not reading the book and participating in the club helped to improve their English-speaking abilities. Quantitative data, in the form of a nine-statement survey, and qualitative data, in the form of a nine-question open-ended questionnaire, were collected and analyzed. While a great deal of the literature on common read programs has explored the experiences of participants within the North American context, there is a dearth of research outside of that context, including the Polish context. The present study attempts to ameliorate this situation. The main findings from the study show that, overall, participants enjoyed the experience of reading the book and that participation in the program has been beneficial for them, including getting them to read more, to engage in discussions more, to think more deeply about more diverse topics and issues, and perhaps most importantly, to im­prove their English language abilities. https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/TAPSLA/article/view/14630commonread programsInternational Book Club
spellingShingle Emerson Case
Agnieszka Kaczmarek
Sebastian Zatylny
Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club
Theory and Practice of Second Language Acquisition
common
read programs
International Book Club
title Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club
title_full Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club
title_fullStr Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club
title_full_unstemmed Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club
title_short Reading, Discussing, and Sharing: Creation of a Vibrant Transnational Online Learning Community through the International Book Club
title_sort reading discussing and sharing creation of a vibrant transnational online learning community through the international book club
topic common
read programs
International Book Club
url https://www.journals.us.edu.pl/index.php/TAPSLA/article/view/14630
work_keys_str_mv AT emersoncase readingdiscussingandsharingcreationofavibranttransnationalonlinelearningcommunitythroughtheinternationalbookclub
AT agnieszkakaczmarek readingdiscussingandsharingcreationofavibranttransnationalonlinelearningcommunitythroughtheinternationalbookclub
AT sebastianzatylny readingdiscussingandsharingcreationofavibranttransnationalonlinelearningcommunitythroughtheinternationalbookclub