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'The editor and authors in this volume make a convincing case for
focusing on advanced foreign language instruction. Importantly,
they invite consideration of this focus as an opportunity to
re-examine conventional definitions of the target of instruction.
In so doing, readers also learn more about the theories highlighted
in this volume, and their capacity to enhance our understanding of
advancedness and its development within an educational context.
This book thus mediates between linguistic and language learning
theories and educational practice, modelling the very best of what
applied linguistics has to offer.' Diane Larsen-Freeman, Professor
of Education, University of Michigan. The reality of multicultural
societies and globalization has increased the demand for language
abilities that far exceed those that have typically been associated
with communicative competence in a second language. This book
examines the acquisition of advanced levels of ability in three
parts: theoretical; descriptive; and instructional. It moves beyond
the traditional constraints of second language acquisition research
by linking systemic functional linguistics and sociocultural
theory.The contributors draw primarily on the work of Halliday,
Vygotsky and Bakhtin, as well as empirical data from the language
classroom, to suggest practical applications towards advanced
literacy and linguistic competence. Advanced Language Learning will
be of interest to academics researching systemic functional
linguistics, second language acquisition and applied linguistics.
Researchers and educators routinely call for longitudinal research
on language learning and teaching. The present volume explores the
connection between longitudinal study and advanced language
capacities, two under-researched areas, and proposes an agenda for
future research. Five chapters probe theoretical and methodological
reflections about the longitudinal study of advanced L2 capacities,
followed by eight chapters that report on empirical longitudinal
investigations spanning descriptive, quasi-experimental,
qualitative, and quantitative longitudinal methodologies. In
addition, the co-editors offer a detailed introduction to the
volume and a coda chapter in which they explore what it would take
to design systematic research programs for the longitudinal
investigation of advanced L2 capacities. The scholars in this
volume collectively make the argument that second language
acquisition research will be the richer, theoretically and
empirically, if a trajectory toward advancedness is part of its
conceptualization right from the beginning and, in reverse, that
advancedness is a particularly interesting acquisitional level at
which to probe contemporary theories associated with the
longitudinal study of language development. Acknowledging that
advancedness is increasingly important in our multicultural
societies and globalized world, the central question explored in
the present collection is: How does learning over time evolve
toward advanced capacities in a second language?
Advanced language learning has only recently begun to capture the
interest and attention of applied linguists and professionals in
language education in the United States. In this breakthrough
volume, experts in the field lay the groundwork for approaching the
increasingly important role of advanced language learning in the
larger context of multilingual societies, globalization, and
security. This volume presents both general and theoretical
insights and language-specific considerations in college classrooms
spanning a range of languages, from the commonly taught languages
of English, French, and German to the less commonly taught Farsi,
Korean, Norwegian, and Russian. Among theoretical frameworks likely
to be conducive to imagining and fostering instructed
"advancedness" in a second language, this volume highlights a
cognitive-semantic approach. The theoretical and data-based
findings make clear that advanced learners in particular are
characterized by the capacity to make situated choices from across
the entire language system, from vocabulary and grammar to
discourse features, which suggests the need for a text-oriented,
meaning-driven approach to language teaching, learning, and
research. This volume also considers whether and how information
structuring in second-language composition reveals first-language
preferences of grammaticized concepts. Other topics include
curricular and instructional approaches to narrativity, vocabulary
expansion, the demands on instructed programs for efficiency and
effectiveness in order to assure advanced levels, and learners'
ability to function in professional contexts with their diverse
oral and written genre requirements. Finally, the volume probes the
role and nature of assessment as a measurement tool for both
researching and assessing advanced language learning and as an
essential component of improving programs.
Researchers and educators routinely call for longitudinal research
on language learning and teaching. The present volume explores the
connection between longitudinal study and advanced language
capacities, two under-researched areas, and proposes an agenda for
future research. Five chapters probe theoretical and methodological
reflections about the longitudinal study of advanced L2 capacities,
followed by eight chapters that report on empirical longitudinal
investigations spanning descriptive, quasi-experimental,
qualitative, and quantitative longitudinal methodologies. In
addition, the co-editors offer a detailed introduction to the
volume and a coda chapter in which they explore what it would take
to design systematic research programs for the longitudinal
investigation of advanced L2 capacities. The scholars in this
volume collectively make the argument that second language
acquisition research will be the richer, theoretically and
empirically, if a trajectory toward advancedness is part of its
conceptualization right from the beginning and, in reverse, that
advancedness is a particularly interesting acquisitional level at
which to probe contemporary theories associated with the
longitudinal study of language development. Acknowledging that
advancedness is increasingly important in our multicultural
societies and globalized world, the central question explored in
the present collection is: How does learning over time evolve
toward advanced capacities in a second language?
This title examines the need for advanced levels of language
learning from socio-cultural and linguistic perspectives.'The
editor and authors in this volume make a convincing case for
focusing on advanced foreign language instruction. Importantly,
they invite consideration of this focus as an opportunity to
re-examine conventional definitions of the target of instruction.
In so doing, readers also learn more about the theories highlighted
in this volume, and their capacity to enhance our understanding of
advancedness and its development within an educational context.
This book thus mediates between linguistic and language learning
theories and educational practice, modelling the very best of what
applied linguistics has to offer' - Diane Larsen-Freeman, Professor
of Education, University of Michigan.The reality of multicultural
societies and globalization has increased the demand for language
abilities that far exceed those that have typically been associated
with communicative competence in a second language. This book
examines the acquisition of advanced levels of ability in three
parts: theoretical; descriptive; and instructional. It moves beyond
the traditional constraints of second language acquisition research
by linking systemic functional linguistics and sociocultural
theory. The contributors draw primarily on the work of Halliday,
Vygotsky and Bakhtin, as well as empirical data from the language
classroom, to suggest practical applications towards advanced
literacy and linguistic competence."Advanced Language Learning"
will be of interest to academics researching systemic functional
linguistics, second language acquisition and applied linguistics.
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