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The Art of Teaching Spanish explores in-depth the findings of
research in second language acquisition (SLA) and other
language-related fields and translates those findings into
practical pedagogical tools for current - and future -
Spanish-language instructors. This volume addresses how theoretical
frameworks affect the application of research findings to the
teaching of Spanish, how logistical factors affect the way research
findings can be applied to teach Spanish, and how findings from
Spanish SLA research would be applicable to Spanish second language
teaching and represented in Spanish curricula through objectives
and goals (as evidenced in pedagogical materials such as textbooks
and computer-assisted language learning software). Top SLA
researchers and applied linguists lend their expertise on matters
such as foreign language across curriculum programs, testing,
online learning, the incorporation of linguistic variation into the
classroom, heritage language learners, the teaching of translation,
the effects of study abroad and classroom contexts on learning, and
other pedagogical issues. Other common themes of The Art of
Teaching Spanish include the rejection of the concept of a
monolithic language competence, the importance of language as
social practice and cultural competence, the psycholinguistic
component of SLA, and the need for more cross-fertilization from
related fields.
This collection is the first to examine the effects of bilingualism
and multilingualism on the development of dialectal varieties of
Spanish in Africa, America, Asia and Europe. Nineteen essays
investigate a variety of complex situations of contact between
Spanish and typologically different languages, including Basque,
Bantu languages, English, and Quechua. The overall picture that
evolves clearly indicates that although influence from the contact
languages may lead to different dialects, the core grammar of
Spanish remains intact. Silva-Corvalan's volume makes an important
contribution both to sociolinguistics in general, and to Spanish
linguistics in particular. The contributors address theoretical and
empirical issues that advance our knowledge of what is a possible
linguistic change, how languages change, and how changes spread in
society in situations of intensive bilingualism and language
contact, a situation that appears to be the norm rather than the
exception in the world.
"El espanol en contacto con otras lenguas" is the first
comprehensive historical, social, and linguistic overview of
Spanish in contact with other languages in all of its major
contexts - in Spain, the United States, and Latin America. In this
significant contribution to the field of Hispanic linguistics,
Carol A. Klee and Andrew Lynch explore the historical and social
factors that have shaped contact varieties of the Spanish language,
synthesizing the principle arguments and theories about language
contact, and examining linguistic changes in Spanish phonology,
morphology and syntax, and pragmatics. Individual chapters analyze
particular contact situations: in Spain, contact with Basque,
Catalan, Valencian, and Galician; in Mexico, Central, and South
America, contact with Nahuatl, Maya, Quechua, Aimara, and Guarani;
in the Southern Cone, contact with other principle European
languages such as Portuguese, Italian, English, German, and Danish;
and, in the United States, contact with English. A separate chapter
explores issues of creolization in the Philippines and the Americas
and highlights the historical influence of African languages on
Spanish, primarily in the Caribbean and Equatorial Guinea. Written
in Spanish, this detailed synthesis of wide-ranging research will
be a valuable resource for scholars of Hispanic linguistics,
language contact, and sociolinguistics.
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