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Modern technology has enhanced many aspects of life, including
classroom education. By offering virtual learning experiences,
educational systems can become more efficient and effective at
teaching the student population. Multilingual Writing and
Pedagogical Cooperation in Virtual Learning Environments is a
critical scholarly resource that examines experiences with virtual
networks and their advantages for universities and students in the
domains of writing, translation, and usability testing. Featuring
coverage on a broad range of topics such as collaborative writing,
project-based learning, and writing and translation practices, this
book is geared towards administrators, teachers, professors,
academicians, practitioners, and researchers seeking current
research on multilingual writing and pedagogical cooperation in
virtual learning environments.
I first used the Internet in fall 1993, as a Fulbright Scholar at
Charles University in Prague. I immediately recognized that the
Internet would radically transform second language teaching and
learning, and within a year had written my first book on the topic,
E-Mail for English Teaching. The book galvanized a wave of growing
interest in the relationship of the Internet to language learning,
and was soon followed by many more books on the topic by applied
linguists or educators. This volume, though, represents one of the
first that specifically analyzes the relationship of new
technologies to the teaching of languages for specific purposes
(LSP), and, in doing so, makes an important contribution. The
overall impact of information and communication technology (ICT) on
second language learning can be summarized in two ways, both of
which have special significance for teaching LSP. First, ICT has
transformed the context of language learning. The stunning growth
of the Internet-resulting in 24 trillion email messages sent in
2005, and more than 600 billion Web pages and 50 million blogs
online in the same year-has helped make possible the development of
English as the world's first global language.
I first used the Internet in fall 1993, as a Fulbright Scholar at
Charles University in Prague. I immediately recognized that the
Internet would radically transform second language teaching and
learning, and within a year had written my first book on the topic,
E-Mail for English Teaching. The book galvanized a wave of growing
interest in the relationship of the Internet to language learning,
and was soon followed by many more books on the topic by applied
linguists or educators. This volume, though, represents one of the
first that specifically analyzes the relationship of new
technologies to the teaching of languages for specific purposes
(LSP), and, in doing so, makes an important contribution. The
overall impact of information and communication technology (ICT) on
second language learning can be summarized in two ways, both of
which have special significance for teaching LSP. First, ICT has
transformed the context of language learning. The stunning growth
of the Internet-resulting in 24 trillion email messages sent in
2005, and more than 600 billion Web pages and 50 million blogs
online in the same year-has helped make possible the development of
English as the world's first global language.
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