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A systematic review examining the efficacy of commercially available foreign language learning mobile apps

Jodi Tommerdahl, Chrystal Sapphire Dragonflame, Amanda A. Olsen

2022Computer Assisted Language Learning28 citationsDOI

Abstract

A systematic review examining the efficacy of commercially available foreign language-learning apps (FLL) was completed. A database search of ERIC, PsychINFO, and LearnTechLib produced 1,786 journal articles. After applying specific inclusion and exclusion criteria based on Burston’s seminal study (2015) requiring a minimum number of 10 participants, quantitative learning outcome data and rigorous research design, eight studies remained. These studies were categorized in terms of the app studied, year of publication, language taught, age group of participants, setting, length of study, and device(s) used. Descriptive statistics demonstrate there is a dearth of studies examining app efficacy, that English was the most commonly taught language, and that vocabulary was the most commonly tested area. Although commercial apps were found to successfully support FLL, the included studies’ methods varied in ways that made direct comparison difficult.

Topics & Concepts

VocabularyDescriptive statisticsInclusion (mineral)Foreign languageMobile appsComputer sciencePsychologyEnglish languageMathematics educationWorld Wide WebLinguisticsSocial psychologyStatisticsMathematicsPhilosophyMobile Learning in EducationInnovative Teaching and Learning MethodsImpact of Technology on Adolescents