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A consensus seems to exist on the following. In foreign language
acquisition methodology sound methods and efficient tools have been
developed until now in order to allow the learner to master and put
into practice grammar, basic vocabulary and frequent communicative
rules. Within this area Computer Assisted Language Learning (CALL)
has become an indispensable partner, often leading the game. Beyond
these borders, however, methodology as a whole becomes more
blurred. Rules seem to vanish, variation and specialisation
increase. Intuitive and ad hoc approaches seem to take the lead on
formally established methods. The reasons for this are obvious: how
to control the enormous, ever changing and expanding set of data,
links and encyclopedic information that we associate with a richly
developed human language? In front of this overwhelming opponent
the search for method often surrenders. This is the point where
CALL could offer foreign language learning the opportunity to make
another jump forward. Information technology is capable of handling
and streamlining huge and complex amounts of information. But this
is also the point where language crosses the border of the purely
linguistic fact, and where language learning has to come to terms
with what we would call "cultural" issues."
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