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This edited collection brings together papers by eminent scholars
who attempt to demonstrate how challenges can most successfully be
ameliorated with an eye to enhancing the effectiveness of the
processes of language teaching and learning. In Part One, emphasis
is placed on challenges that second language education has to face,
both those more general, dealing with language policy issues, and
those more specific, concerned with instructional options in the
language classroom. Part Two focuses on challenges involved in
researching the processes of teaching and learning in the second
and foreign languages classroom, both with respect to research
methodology and efforts to tap some variables impinging upon the
effects of instruction. Finally, Part Three is devoted to
challenges involved in second and foreign language teacher
education, the quality of which to a large extent determines the
outcomes of second language education in any educational context.
The volume brings together papers related to different aspects of
classroom-oriented research on teaching and learning second and
foreign languages that have been authored by specialists from
Poland and abroad. The first part contains contributions dealing
with individual variation in the language classroom, in particular
age, anxiety, beliefs and language learning strategies. The second
part deals with various facets of teachers' behaviors in the
classroom, focusing in particular on classroom communication and
the use of action research in teacher training. The third part
includes papers devoted to various instructional practices, such as
the use of new technologies, the development of intercultural
competence, assessment or combining content and language. Finally,
the last part deals with issues involved in research methodology,
with special emphasis being placed on the use of diaries,
observations, mixed methods research as well as triangulation.
The present volume brings together papers devoted to the role of
learner and teacher autonomy in the process of second and foreign
language learning, which have been contributed by scholars from
Poland and abroad. The book has been divided into three parts in
accordance with the topics that the individual contributions touch
upon. The first part includes papers dealing with different ways in
which learner autonomy can be fostered and evaluated. The papers
contained in Part Two are connected with the role of language
learning strategies in the development of learner independence.
Finally, Chapter Three focuses on developing teacher autonomy,
which, in the opinion of many specialists, is indispensable if
learner autonomy is to be promoted. Thanks to its wide-ranging
focus, this edited collection will be of interest not only to
second language learning specialists interested in the role of
learner autonomy, but also to undergraduate, graduate and
postgraduate students working on their BA, MA and PhD theses, as
well as practitioners wishing to promote learner independence in
their classrooms.
This book offers a comprehensive account of individual differences
variables as well as contextual factors that impinge on second
language learners' willingness to communicate (WTC). Firstly, it
adopts a macro-perspective on WTC, which entails an attempt to
identify variables that are related to WTC, taking into account the
specificity of the Polish higher education setting. Secondly, it
embraces a micro-perspective on WTC, striving to pinpoint the
individual and contextual influences on levels of WTC in the course
of regularly-scheduled, naturally-occurring English classes, as
well as to capture the dynamic nature of WTC during such classes.
Together, these perspectives bring the reader closer to
understanding the mechanisms underlying WTC in specific contexts,
thereby providing a basis for recommendations for classroom
practice that could translate into learners' success. It will be of
interest to second language acquisition researchers and students,
as well as to methodologists and materials writers who can use the
research findings to improve the practice of teaching and learning
speaking in the language classroom.
The book addresses one of the key controversies in teaching foreign
language grammar, which is the utility of production-oriented
instruction, as exemplified in the PPP sequence, and
comprehension-based teaching, as implemented in interpretation
tasks and processing instruction. It provides a thorough overview
of issues related to learning and teaching grammar, with a
particular focus on input-oriented approaches, and reports the
findings of four studies which sought to compare their effects with
instruction based on different forms of output practice. The
findings serve as a basis for guidelines on how the two options can
be successfully combined in the classroom
This edited collection brings together papers by eminent scholars
who attempt to demonstrate how challenges can most successfully be
ameliorated with an eye to enhancing the effectiveness of the
processes of language teaching and learning. In Part One, emphasis
is placed on challenges that second language education has to face,
both those more general, dealing with language policy issues, and
those more specific, concerned with instructional options in the
language classroom. Part Two focuses on challenges involved in
researching the processes of teaching and learning in the second
and foreign languages classroom, both with respect to research
methodology and efforts to tap some variables impinging upon the
effects of instruction. Finally, Part Three is devoted to
challenges involved in second and foreign language teacher
education, the quality of which to a large extent determines the
outcomes of second language education in any educational context.
The present volume brings together papers devoted to the role of
learner and teacher autonomy in the process of second and foreign
language learning, which have been contributed by scholars from
Poland and abroad. The book has been divided into three parts in
accordance with the topics that the individual contributions touch
upon. The first part includes papers dealing with different ways in
which learner autonomy can be fostered and evaluated. The papers
contained in Part Two are connected with the role of language
learning strategies in the development of learner independence.
Finally, Chapter Three focuses on developing teacher autonomy,
which, in the opinion of many specialists, is indispensable if
learner autonomy is to be promoted. Thanks to its wide-ranging
focus, this edited collection will be of interest not only to
second language learning specialists interested in the role of
learner autonomy, but also to undergraduate, graduate and
postgraduate students working on their BA, MA and PhD theses, as
well as practitioners wishing to promote learner independence in
their classrooms.
The volume brings together papers related to different aspects of
classroom-oriented research on teaching and learning second and
foreign languages that have been authored by specialists from
Poland and abroad. The first part contains contributions dealing
with individual variation in the language classroom, in particular
age, anxiety, beliefs and language learning strategies. The second
part deals with various facets of teachers' behaviors in the
classroom, focusing in particular on classroom communication and
the use of action research in teacher training. The third part
includes papers devoted to various instructional practices, such as
the use of new technologies, the development of intercultural
competence, assessment or combining content and language. Finally,
the last part deals with issues involved in research methodology,
with special emphasis being placed on the use of diaries,
observations, mixed methods research as well as triangulation.
The book addresses one of the key controversies in teaching foreign
language grammar, which is the utility of production-oriented
instruction, as exemplified in the PPP sequence, and
comprehension-based teaching, as implemented in interpretation
tasks and processing instruction. It provides a thorough overview
of issues related to learning and teaching grammar, with a
particular focus on input-oriented approaches, and reports the
findings of four studies which sought to compare their effects with
instruction based on different forms of output practice. The
findings serve as a basis for guidelines on how the two options can
be successfully combined in the classroom
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