FLIPPED CLASSROOM TECHNOLOGY AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION AT VARIOUS LEVELS OF HIGHER EDUCATION
Abstract
The fourth industrial revolution influences the system of education requiring abilities and
competencies that go beyond what has traditionally been taught in the classroom. The main concern
is the social nature of learning and the ability to collaborate using digital technologies. It also
results in some general shifts in the world of learning – lifelong learning – from childhood,
to continuous learning in the workplace. Foreign language as an academic subject has a great
potential to meet the needs of industry 4.0 as it is taught at all levels of education. There are a lot
of modern technologies of teaching languages: teaching in cooperation, project method, modular
and blended learning. In this article we will focus on the Flipped classroom technology at different
levels of education: bachelor, master, postgraduate training. The advantages and limitations of
using this method at different levels are revealed. We provide an overview of information technologies
that can be used to implement this method. Guidelines are given on how to ensure
the technological continuity of the educational process, using the Flipped classroom, to develop
students ' readiness for different ways of knowledge transfer. The authors describe the flipped
class model and experience of using the flipped classroom technology teaching English at bachelor's,
master's and advanced training courses at the South Ural State University.