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With an estimated 1.6 million English as an Additional Language
(EAL) learners in the UK, and over 5 million in the USA, EAL
research is urgently needed to inform practice. This edited volume
investigates the multifaceted elements that shape EAL pedagogy and
research in a variety of settings and research areas including
linguistic ability influences on subject-specific skills,
integrating learners' home languages into classroom environments,
and the importance of supporting EAL teachers in the classroom. In
doing so, the contributors provide an international perspective on
the emerging field of EAL research. The research-based chapters
detail fundamental concerns related to EAL learner education. The
text is composed of three parts: Part 1 explores the question of
what is EAL and how a definition can shape policy construction;
Part 2 examines the challenges EAL learners face in the classroom,
including the use of first languages and the relative impact
learner language proficiency has on subject-specific classes; and
Part 3 investigates concerns relating to supporting EAL teachers in
the classroom. The volume draws on researcher expertise from a
variety of universities and institutions worldwide. It explores
diverse language backgrounds in multilingual contexts. It covers
empirical studies with pedagogical, policy and further research
implications. The volume represents a single resource invaluable
for EAL teachers, trainers and trainees, as well as researchers in
the field of education, language learning and teaching,
bilingualism and multilingualism, and second language acquisition.
This edited volume provides a single coherent overview of
vocabulary teaching and learning in relation to each of the four
skills (reading, writing, listening, speaking). Each of the four
sections presents a skill area with two chapters presented by two
leading experts in the field, relating recent advances in the field
to the extent that each skill area relates differently to
vocabulary and how this informs pedagogy and policy. The book opens
with a summary of recent advances in the field of vocabulary, and
closes by drawing conclusions from the skill areas covered. The
chapters respond to emerging vocabulary research trends that
indicate that lexical acquisition needs to be treated differently
according to the skill area. The editors have chosen chapters to
respond to recent research advances and to highlight practical and
pedagogical application in a single coherent volume.
This collection brings together recent research on the influences
between first and additional languages with a focus on the
development of multilingual lexicons. Featuring work from an
international group of scholars, the volume examines the complex
dynamics underpinning vocabulary in second and third languages and
the role first languages play within this process. The book is
organized around three different facets of research in this area -
lexical recognition, processing, and knowledge; the effects of
first languages on second language reading and writing,
collocations, and translation skills; and, vocabulary testing -
drawing on examples from a variety of languages, including European
languages, Arabic, and Japanese. Setting the stage for further
research on the interplay between first languages and multilingual
lexicons, this volume is key reading for students and researchers
in applied linguistics, language learning and teaching,
bilingualism, second language acquisition, and translation studies.
This edited volume provides a single coherent overview of
vocabulary teaching and learning in relation to each of the four
skills (reading, writing, listening, speaking). Each of the four
sections presents a skill area with two chapters presented by two
leading experts in the field, relating recent advances in the field
to the extent that each skill area relates differently to
vocabulary and how this informs pedagogy and policy. The book opens
with a summary of recent advances in the field of vocabulary, and
closes by drawing conclusions from the skill areas covered. The
chapters respond to emerging vocabulary research trends that
indicate that lexical acquisition needs to be treated differently
according to the skill area. The editors have chosen chapters to
respond to recent research advances and to highlight practical and
pedagogical application in a single coherent volume.
This collection brings together recent research on the influences
between first and additional languages with a focus on the
development of multilingual lexicons. Featuring work from an
international group of scholars, the volume examines the complex
dynamics underpinning vocabulary in second and third languages and
the role first languages play within this process. The book is
organized around three different facets of research in this area -
lexical recognition, processing, and knowledge; the effects of
first languages on second language reading and writing,
collocations, and translation skills; and, vocabulary testing -
drawing on examples from a variety of languages, including European
languages, Arabic, and Japanese. Setting the stage for further
research on the interplay between first languages and multilingual
lexicons, this volume is key reading for students and researchers
in applied linguistics, language learning and teaching,
bilingualism, second language acquisition, and translation studies.
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