Few matters induce more dialogue among foreign language
educators than the problem of students' transition between levels
of language study. Secondary school teachers worry about how best
to prepare their students for the demands of postsecondary language
study. College instructors struggle with how to integrate a
diversely prepared freshman population into their curriculum.
The mission of this volume has been to assemble the theory,
research, and vision of leaders in the field of foreign language
articulation into a single volume which will benefit foreign
language educators, students, program administrators, and
researchers by presenting models of the most recent articulation
efforts in the United States. Readers are provided with practical
suggestions for facilitating placement at the local level, and
offered theoretical direction for the future. The scope of this
work is broad enough to reflect the experience and observations of
most educators grappling with placement issues, while chapter
themes offer concrete and theoretical insight into many individual
facets of articulation.
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