how to reexamine and adapt their approaches by allowing students to take advantage of
available technology in an effective way.
Technology has been present in English language instruction since the early 1940s
(Richards & Rodgers, 2014). Yet, these earlier uses of technology lacked “the anytime,
anywhere” advantage provided by modern mobile phones and their apps (McQuiggan, 2015).
Multiple applications now exist for both students and teachers on various platforms. One such
platform is the Google Play Store, also known as Play Store, which offers a variety of free
mobile apps for Android smartphones. These apps can facilitate the development of language
skills in English as a Foreign Language (EFL) classroom for teenagers and adults at the
intermediate to advanced levels (Godwin-Jones, 2017).
As technology has evolved, so has its role in the classroom. In the last ten years,
smartphone apps have been developed to help teachers and students in the teaching and
learning of languages. Yet, although this is the 21st century, some teachers still use
technology from the mid-20th century. These technology tools are outdated and not relevant
to students’ interests and needs. Such outdated tools include using worksheets, copying notes
from the board, and listening to lectures (Pletka, 2007). Current technology offers numerous
apps that claim to support the acquisition of English language skills. Yet, because of
insufficient studies about the effectiveness of these apps, educators are unable to ascertain
which apps might be best for their EFL students. To help educators recommend apps for their
students, we reviewed apps available in Play Store designed to develop English language
skills. Our three-fold purpose for this study is as follows:
1)
Identify free Android apps for the teaching and learning of EFL according to the
skill identified for a given app,
2)
Describe selected EFL apps at the intermediate to advanced levels, and
3)
Describe and review the twelve free Android apps that were the most widely
downloaded and highly rated by users at the time of this study.
Our main goal is to help EFL educators select free Android apps according to targeted
language development skills and, by doing so, support their students in acquiring English.
To achieve this goal, our study was guided by two research questions:
1)
Which free Android apps offer the potential of enhancing the teaching and learning
of English?
2)
To what extent can twelve of these apps be useful to learners for developing skills
in speaking, listening, reading, writing, vocabulary and grammar?
In addition to providing a review of existing apps, this study also provides teachers
with the Language Skills App Review Rubric (LSARR). Though yet untested for reliability
and validity, this author-developed rubric can be used by teachers for conducting their own
review of other apps, both those currently available as well as those yet to be designed. A
potential weakness of this study is how it reviews only a limited number of apps and how all
reviewed apps are Android and available only through Play Store.