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Second Language Acquisition Processes in the Classroom - Learning Japanese (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,530
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Second Language Acquisition Processes in the Classroom - Learning Japanese (Hardcover)
Series: Second Language Acquisition Research Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book is the first study to examine how interactional style
develops within the walls of a foreign language classroom in the
first two years of language study. Results show learners to be
highly sensitive to pragmatic information and that learners can
move toward an appropriate interactional style through classroom
interactive experience.
The book shows how learners are most often sources who offer
assistance and correction, with errors serving most often to
stimulate further thinking about what form is correct. Analysis
shows learners to be active in seeking corrective information in
the classroom setting, not only from peer partners but also from
the teacher. They are active in noticing how the teacher's
utterances--even when addressed to others--contrast with their own,
and utilize corrective feedback intended for other students. In
addition, the results show that teacher-initiated corrective
feedback addressed to individual learners is only one source of
corrective feedback. Learners are shown to be active in both
teacher-fronted and peer interactive settings.
In newer L2 teaching methodologies which focus on the use of peer
interactive tasks, the teacher's role has been de-emphasized. This
book, however, shows how important the teacher's role is. The final
chapter examines how the teacher can act to maximize the benefits
of peer interactive tasks through how they design tasks and present
them to the class. First, the chapter looks at how learners use
English--their L1--in the classroom, concluding that how teachers
present activities to the class has an impact on the amount of L1
used by students during peer interaction. Following up on this
finding, the chapter works to address questions that teachers face
in lesson planning and teaching. It presents a useful list of
questions teachers can ask when designing peer interactive tasks in
order to maximize the effectiveness of a wide variety of language
learning tasks.
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