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Books > Language & Literature > Language teaching & learning (other than ELT)
This book addresses a significant gap in the research literature on
transitions across the school years: the continuities and
discontinuities in school literacy education and their implications
for practice. Across different curriculum domains, and using social
semiotic, ethnographic, and conversation-analytic approaches, the
contributors investigate key transition points for individual
students' literacy development, elements of literacy knowledge that
are at stake at each of these points, and variability in students'
experiences. Grounding its discussion in classroom voices,
experiences and texts, this book reveals literacy-specific
curriculum demands and considers how teachers and students
experience and account for these evolving demands. The contributors
include a number of established names (such as Freebody,
Derewianka, Myhill, Rowsell, Moje and Lefstein), as well as
emerging scholars gaining increasing recognition in the field. They
draw out implications for how literacy development is theorized in
school curriculum and practice, teacher education, further research
and policy formation. In addition, each section of the book
features a summary from an international scholar who draws together
key ideas from the section and relates these to their current
thinking. They deploy a range of different theoretical and
methodological approaches in order to bring rich yet complementary
perspectives to bear on the issue of literacy transition.
This book creatively redefines how teacher educators and faculty in
secondary and post-secondary language education can become
designers with intercultural education in mind. The author aligns
theoretical frameworks with practical features for revising the
modern language curriculum via themes and novel tasks that transfer
language learning from classroom to community, developing
communicative competence for mediation and learner autonomy along
the way. For novice and experienced instructors alike, this book
empowers them to: - design curriculum from transferable concepts
that are worthy of understanding and have value within the
culture(s) and to the learner; - develop assessments that ask the
learner to solve problems, and create products that transfer
concepts or address needs of various audiences that they will
encounter in community, life, and work; - direct language learners
through a spiral, articulated program that supports academic,
career and personal goals. Pedagogical features include a glossary
of key terms, research-to-practice boxes, scaffolded design tasks,
reflection questions and template samples representing language
exemplars from the following languages and cultures: Arabic,
Chinese, Ede Yoruba, French, German, Hindi, Italian, Japanese,
Korean, Ladino, Nahuatl, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Te Reo Maori
and Urdu. The accompanying online resources offer blank templates,
PowerPoints and guides for designing bespoke curricula with key
performance assessments.
As a predominant teaching paradigm, foreign language learning has
increasingly been one of the crucial elements that leads to career
accomplishments for students. Due to this, foreign language
assessment has emerged as a major topic in the field of foreign
language learning. The Handbook of Research on Perspectives in
Foreign Language Assessment examines perspectives on language
assessment through reflections on classroom applications and makes
recommendations to strengthen quality language assessments by
drawing on a variety of research methodologies. It also provides a
foundation as to why foreign language assessment as a discipline
should be refocused with caution, what sort of theoretical and
practical implications should be in place for foreign language
teachers, and in what ways it may be possible to provide futuristic
perspectives on foreign language assessment for test developers and
users involved in language assessment. Covering key topics such as
testing, literacy, and language teaching, this major reference work
is ideal for industry professionals, policymakers, administrators,
researchers, academicians, scholars, practitioners, instructors,
preservice teachers, teacher educators, librarians, and students.
Population diversity is becoming more prevalent globally with
increasing immigration, emigration, and refugee placement. These
circumstances increase the likelihood that a child will be raised
speaking a different language in the home than the common language
used in each country. This necessitates the development of
comprehensive strategies that promote second language learning
through the adoption of new technological advancements. New
Technological Applications for Foreign and Second Language Learning
and Teaching is a scholarly publication that explores how the
latest technologies have the potential to engage foreign and second
language learners both within and outside the language classroom
and to facilitate language learning and teaching in the target
language. Highlighting a range of topics such as learning
analytics, digital games, and telecollaboration, this book is ideal
for teachers, instructional designers, curriculum developers, IT
consultants, educational software developers, language learning
specialists, academicians, administrators, professionals,
researchers, and students.
While there are many English books available on academic research
methods and philosophy, many complain that they are difficult for
budding, non-native English-speaking researchers to use and
understand. Rather than hiding behind jargon, writers should
describe and define the concepts for the benefit of non-native
English speakers. Social Research Methodology and Publishing
Results: A Guide to Non-Native English Speakers explains methods
commonly used in the field of academic research, provides stimulus
to non-native English-speaking researchers for successful
implementation of academic research, and meets the need for an
appropriate course framework and materials for teaching research
methodology. Covering topics such as pragmatism, research design,
and empirical modeling, this premier reference source is a dynamic
resource for educators and administrators of higher education,
pre-service teachers, librarians, teacher educators, non-native
English-speaking researchers, and academicians.
Many research studies show that the use of technology inside and
outside classrooms makes teaching and learning more engaging and
motivating. Technology can provide learners with endless
opportunities, for instance, it can (a) improve the learners'
learning experience; (b) simplify access to educational resources;
(c) enhance the learners' autonomous learning; meet the learners'
individual learning needs, and (d) prepare the learners for future
career success when using it to foster the 21st-century skills.
However, the range and number of technologies currently available
can yield challenges for educators if they do not know how to
effectively integrate them into their teaching pedagogy. Therefore,
this book, Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL) explores
language with technology focusing on English as a Foreign Language
(EFL) context and sharing with educators everywhere how the
effective use of technology can bring a positive transformation to
the class dynamics and the students' learning process. With that
being said, to professionally assist learners master all of the
four language skills; learners need to be able to communicate in
the target language fluently. This, of course, involves developing
the learners' language proficiency through interactions and
providing them with authentic opportunities for learning that go
beyond repetition and memorization of grammatical patterns in
isolation. To assist language learners in mastering these sets of
competencies, they need to be given the opportunities to understand
and use the language appropriately and to communicate in authentic
social environments using a variety of well-planned activities. The
effective integration of technology in language teaching and
learning could support achieving the above-mentioned competencies
and more. Luckily, there are many useful and easy to use
educational technology tools that are available for all language
teachers, educators, and learners to use during class time and/or
independently. These tools are increasing rabidly that teachers
might feel intimated and choose to avoid learning about them and
integrating them in their teaching pedagogy and instead they would
feel comfortable keeping with the traditional methods of teaching.
Therefore, in this book, CALL experts will provide language
teachers with some useful and easy to use technology tools for
teaching and learning; support the recommendation with practical
ideas such as mini-lesson plans to leverage the use of that
specific technology; and promote all or any of the learners'
21st-century skills, e.g., building strong interpersonal
communication skills, working as effective team players, thinking
and creating in an innovative way, thinking critically about what
they are doing and learning and more. The book is intended for all
language teachers and educators, language program directors and
administrators, Computer Assisted Language (CALL) coaches,
university professors, instructional technology coaches, language
instructional technology specialists, and all graduate and
undergraduate students who are interested in teaching language
through technology. Each chapter should include practical tips and
ideas to support best practices for each soft skill and language
strand with the use of technology.
No other description available.
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