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Books > Language & Literature > Language teaching & learning (other than ELT) > Specific skills > General
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Never before have parents, teachers, and other advocates for
young people been more concerned about the declining quality of
higher education. One skill that many students lack when they
arrive at college is the ability to write well. The contributors to
"Teacher Commentary on Student Papers" analyze some of the
cultural, social, and moral changes that have altered the way in
which education is given and received, and they offer approaches
that have assisted them as teachers both in evaluating the quality
of student writing and guiding students to improve their
writing.
Areas of expertise of the contributors include composition,
cultural studies, English education, literature, writing, and
rhetoric. The collection will appeal to both graduate and
undergraduate students as well as to experienced and beginning
teachers.
The comprehension, retention and production of idiomatic
expressions is one of the most difficult areas of the lexicon for
second language (L2) learners, even very advanced students, to
master. This book investigates this under-researched and
interesting aspect of language acquisition, shedding light on both
conventional uses of idiomatic expressions as well as creative
variant forms. The chapters in the book delve into different
aspects of idiomatic mastery: students' comprehension of
canonically used idioms in both their first and second language;
the effects of multimedia and visualization techniques on learners'
comprehension and retention of L2 idioms; students'
misinterpretations of L2 idioms; L2 learners' comprehension of
creative idiom variants and their use of idioms in free composition
writing.
This book is a synthesis of important topics in studying
multilingualism: dynamic multilingualism, translanguaging, language
policy, bilingual education, and bilingualism and cognition. The
author as an immigrant herself integrated personal and dramatic
experiences around most of the topics to show how they influence
the lives of immigrants around the globe. The author's aim is to
reach the readers in a personal way. The issue of translanguaging
and social justice is crucial for the book. The studies on
bilingualism and cognition give amazing results on how bilingual
children profit from increased metalinguistic awareness, abstract
thinking, creativity, working memory, attention control, to name
just a few. Bilingualism is shown to be a real gift for human
understanding. The original feature of this book is the integration
of excerpts of the interviews the author conducted with the experts
in the field of bilingualism: Ellen Bialystok, Jim Cummins, Ofelia
Garci a, Christine He lot, Nancy Hornberger, and Catherine Snow.
For each topic their opinions are combined with future directions
in the research on bilingualism that can certainly inspire other
researchers in the field. Finally, this book is called Drama of
Multilingualism: Literature Review and Liberation, and it is
exactly that, informing and affecting those who want to embark on
this dramatic journey of exploring multilingualism.
This comprehensive collection, comprising both theoretical and
practical contributions, is unique in its focus on language
learning strategy instruction (LLSI). The chapters, written by
leading international experts, embrace both sociolinguistic and
psycholinguistic perspectives. The issues presented include
different models of strategy instruction and how they can be
tailored according to context and the learners' age and attainment
level. The collection will be an important resource for researchers
in the field, both for its critical perspectives and its guidance
on collaborating with teachers to design interventions to implement
strategy instruction. It also identifies key areas for research,
including the teaching of less studied groups of strategies such as
grammar and affective strategies. The book will prove equally
valuable to language teachers through the provision of detailed
teaching materials and tasks. Those engaged in professional
development, whether pre- or in-service teacher education, will
find a wealth of concrete ideas for sessions, courses and
assignments.
This comprehensive collection, comprising both theoretical and
practical contributions, is unique in its focus on language
learning strategy instruction (LLSI). The chapters, written by
leading international experts, embrace both sociolinguistic and
psycholinguistic perspectives. The issues presented include
different models of strategy instruction and how they can be
tailored according to context and the learners' age and attainment
level. The collection will be an important resource for researchers
in the field, both for its critical perspectives and its guidance
on collaborating with teachers to design interventions to implement
strategy instruction. It also identifies key areas for research,
including the teaching of less studied groups of strategies such as
grammar and affective strategies. The book will prove equally
valuable to language teachers through the provision of detailed
teaching materials and tasks. Those engaged in professional
development, whether pre- or in-service teacher education, will
find a wealth of concrete ideas for sessions, courses and
assignments.
This volume explores the relationship between 'study abroad' and
the acquisition of 'sociolinguistic competence' - the ability to
communicate in socially appropriate ways. The volume looks at
language development and use during study abroad in France by
examining patterns of variation in the speech of advanced L2
speakers. Within a variationist paradigm, fine-grained empirical
analyses of speech illuminate choices the L2 speaker makes in
relation to their new identity, gender patterns, closeness or
distance maintained in the social context in which they find
themselves. Using both cross-sectional and longitudinal data, four
variable features of contemporary spoken French are analysed in a
large population of advanced Irish-English speakers of French. This
close-up picture provides empirical evidence by which to evaluate
the wide-spread assumption that Study Abroad is highly beneficial
for second language learning.
This book explores the motivations of adult second language (L2)
learners to learn Italian in continuing education settings in
Australia. It focuses on their motivational drives, learning
trajectories and related dynamics of identity development triggered
by the learning process. Central to the study are adult L2
learners, who are still a largely under-researched and growing
group of learners, and readers will gain a better understanding of
the learning process of this specific group of learners and ideas
for sustaining L2 adult learning motivation in continuing education
settings. Furthermore, the book discusses the role played by the
Italian migrant community in Australia in making Italian a
sought-after language to learn. It explores how a migrant community
may influence motivation, and highlights and expands on the notion
of L2 learning contexts, showing the existence of sociocultural
environments where second language learning trajectories are
affected by the presence of migrant groups.
Foreign Language Input: Initial Processing presents the most
comprehensive study to date of the starting point of second
language acquisition. Its focus is on the language input that
learners receive and what they actually do with this input. The
empirical study detailed in the book follows a methodology in which
all of the language input provided to the learners from the moment
of first exposure is controlled, recorded and transcribed. This
input is then quantitatively compared to the learners' performance
on language tasks administered at various time intervals up to 8
hours after first exposure. This in-depth analysis of the input and
the learners' performance sheds light on questions still unanswered
in second language acquisition literature, such as what knowledge
is brought to the acquisition process and how learners use this
knowledge to process new linguistic information.
This book examines the concept of authentic English in today's
world, where cultures are in constant interaction and the English
language works as a binding agent for many cross-cultural
exchanges. It offers a comprehensive review of decades of debate
around authenticity in language teaching and learning and attempts
to synthesise the complexities by presenting them as a continuum.
This continuum builds on the work of eminent scholars and combines
them within a flexible framework that celebrates the process of
interaction whilst acknowledging the complexity and individual
subjectivity of authenticity. Authenticity is approached as a
complex dynamic construct that can only be understood by examining
it from social, individual and contextual dimensions, in relation
to actual people. Authenticity is a problem not just for language
acquisition but one which affects us as individuals belonging to
society.
SLA literature tends to focus predominantly on what motivates
language learners, but what demotivates them has not been widely
discussed. This book, focusing exclusively on demotivation, will
help readers to understand motivational issues from a different
perspective. The aims of the work are threefold: to present the
current developments of demotivation research in the field of SLA
and bridge motivational theory/research and demotivation research;
to promote the understanding of possible causes of demotivation;
and to expand the focus of demotivation research through a
reflection on current motivation theory/research and a discussion
of methodological issues. The research presented in this book is
situated in Japanese English-teaching contexts and will serve as a
foundation for anyone wishing to better understand the causes of
demotivation in SLA and to explore the topic in their own contexts.
This book explores the importance of cross-linguistic similarity in
foreign language learning. While linguists have primarily focussed
upon differences between languages, learners strive to make use of
any similarities to prior linguistic knowledge they can perceive.
The role of positive transfer is emphasized as well as the
essential differences between comprehension and production. In
comprehension of related languages, cross-linguistic similarities
are easily perceived while in comprehension of distant languages
they are merely assumed. Production may be based on previous
perception of similarities, but frequently similarities are here
merely assumed. Initially, effective learning is based on quick
establishment of cross-linguistic one-to-one relations between
individual items. As learning progresses, the learner learns to
modify such oversimplified relations. The book describes the ways
in which transfer affects different areas of language, taking
account of the differences between learning a language perceived to
be similar and a language where few or no cross-linguistic
similarities can be established.
Build Your Competence and Confidence to Communicate Effectively
with Your Spanish-speaking Patients McGraw Hill's Complete Medical
Spanish goes far beyond a phrasebook or dictionary. This
time-tested resource provides you with the skills and confidence to
interact with Spanish-speaking patients and their families, and
deliver the high quality of care they deserve. Through sample
dialogs, numerous exercises, and more than 200 illustrations, this
program will help you: Master a Spanish vocabulary of more than
3,000 key terms Confidently interview patients, take histories,
conduct physical exams, prescribe medication, and give follow-up
instructions in Spanish Become culturally competent and more aware
of major differences between Latino and Anglo-American cultures and
how they impact healthcare decisions. New to this edition: Sections
on musculoskeletal exam, physical therapy, speech therapy, mental
health, women's health, children's behavioral problems, pandemics *
Questionnaires for GAD7, OASIS *Assessments for OASIS, CAGE* MoCA
Test This bestselling guide is supported by bonus content in McGraw
Hill's Language Lab app: Audio recordings of 40 dialogs and
monologs to help improve your pronunciation and fluency 2,000
flashcards to help memorize key vocabulary Ideal for: physicians,
nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurses (including NPs,
LVNs, LPNs, MAs), hospital technicians, physical therapists, and
medical administrators with little or no Spanish-language
experience.
Mindful of the fact that cultures are now more interdependent than
ever, this book explores the development of critical cultural
awareness through the processes of teaching and learning about
foreign cultures. It draws upon theoretical foundations relating to
inter- and intra-cultural communication from contemporary
philosophical movements, namely Critical Theory and Postmodernism.
The study adopts Critical Pedagogy, as it is described by Freire,
Giroux and others, as the educational framework providing
guidelines for taking a critical perspective towards both native
and foreign cultures. It examines the critical dimension of some
selected documents and models used worldwide for teaching/learning
culture within foreign language classes. It includes a research
project carried out among secondary school teachers of EFL in
Portugal whose national syllabus suggests a critical approach to
English-speaking cultures. This project aimed to illustrate how
practising teachers approach foreign cultures critically, to
provide some grounded theory for a definition of critical cultural
awareness within foreign language/culture education, and to inspire
a proposal for teacher education and development. Finally, this
book submits a general proposal for the development of critical
cultural awareness and intercultural communication competence among
prospective and practising teachers of foreign languages/cultures.
What did eighth-century Japanese sound like? How does one decode its complex script? This book provides the definitive answers to these questions using an unprecedented range of data from the past and the present, including Chinese, Vietnamese, Sanskrit and Tibetan sources, and enables the reader to approximate the original pronunciation of Old Japanese literature. eBook available with sample pages: 0203510720
Exam Essentials Practice Tests provide students with an invaluable
combination of exam information, task guidance and up-to-date exam
practice. This revised edition provides updated tests along with
two completely new tests written by experts in the field and are at
least the same level as the real Cambridge English exam. Students
can be confident that if they do well in the Practice Tests,
they'll do well in the real exam
The majority of children acquire language effortlessly but
approximately 10% of all children find it difficult especially in
the early or preschool years with consequences for many aspects of
their subsequent development and experience: literacy, social
skills, educational qualifications, mental health and employment.
With contributions from an international team of researchers, this
book is the first to draw together a series of new analyses of data
related to children's language development, primarily from
large-scale nationally representative population studies, and to
bring a public health perspective to the field. The book begins
with a section on factors influencing the patterns of language
development. A second section explores continuity and change in
language development over time. The third explores the impact on
individuals with developmental language disorders (DLD), the
effectiveness of available interventions, and broader issues about
the need for equity in the delivery of services to those with DLD.
How do some language learners triumph against all odds, despite not
having obvious heritage links or spending extended periods of time
in the L2 environment pre-adulthood? This book delves into the
autobiographical stories of learners who achieve nativelike
proficiency, opening a narrative window into their experiences and
offering insights into their pathways to success. The in-depth
analysis ties together a wide range of potentially relevant topics,
from motivational vision and international posture to issues of
identity, endurance and even musical ability, among other themes.
The authors explore whether these successes can be repeated by
others and the book will be of use to language teachers interested
in learner motivation and the antecedents to high-level ultimate
attainment. The book will also be of great interest to researchers
working in the areas of language learner psychology, especially in
topics concerning language learning motivation, identity and
narrative inquiry.
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