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Since the introduction of communicative language teaching,
collaborative learning has played an important role in the second
language (L2) classroom. Drawing from sociocultural theory, which
states that human cognitive development is a socially situated
activity mediated by language, studies in L2 pedagogy advocate the
use of tasks that require learners to work together. Collaborative
dialogue encourages language learning, and research shows that the
solutions reached by students in this process are more often
correct with a lasting influence on their language comprehension.
This volume includes ten chapters that illustrate the benefits of
collaborative dialogue in second foreign language classrooms. The
volume considers key issues dealing with collaborative tasks and
implications for language teaching.
This book contributes to the growth of interest in task-based
language learning and teaching that has been seen in recent years.
It brings together research that focuses on various aspects and
effects of pedagogic task design and presents work that uses tasks
to examine oral interaction, written production, vocabulary and
reading, lexical innovation and pragmatics in different formal
language learning contexts and in different languages (English as a
second/foreign language, French/German/Italian/Spanish as foreign
languages). It also provides guidelines for task classification,
sequencing and design. The book is addressed to both professionals
and students interested in second language acquisition research. It
will also be of use to professionals involved in language pedagogy
and curriculum design.
Addressing issues which are critical for language planning, this is
an overview of research on the age factor in foreign language
learning. It presents research on foreign language learning within
bilingual communities in formal instruction settings focusing on
syntax, phonology, writing, oral skills and learning strategies.
The work discusses learning English as a third language in two
bilingual communities.
This book provides an overview of current research on the age
factor in foreign language learning, addressing issues, which are
critical for language planning. It presents new research on foreign
language learning within bilingual communities in formal
instruction settings focussing on syntax, phonology, writing, oral
skills and learning strategies.
The last three decades have witnessed a growth of interest in
research on tasks from various perspectives and numerous books and
collections of articles have been published focusing on the notion
of task and its utility in different contexts. Nevertheless, what
is lacking is a multi-faceted examination of tasks from different
important perspectives. This edited volume, with four sections of
three chapters each, views tasks and Task-based Language Teaching
(TBLT) from four distinct (but complementary) vantage points. In
the first section, all chapters view tasks from a
cognitive-interactionist angle with each addressing one key facet
of either cognition or interaction (or both) in different contexts
(CALL and EFL/ESL). Section two hinges on the idea that language
teaching and learning is perhaps best conceptualized, understood,
and investigated within a complexity theory framework which
accounts for the dynamicity and interrelatedness of the variables
involved. Viewing TBLT from a sociocultural lens is what connects
the chapters included in the third section. Finally, the fourth
section views TBLT from pedagogical and curricular vantage points.
This book presents research on the learning of foreign languages by
children aged 6-12 years old in primary school settings. The
collection provides a significant and important contribution to
this often overlooked domain and aims to provide research-based
evidence that might help to inform and develop pedagogical
practice. Topics covered in the chapters include the influence of
learner characteristics on word retrieval; explicit second language
learning and language awareness; meaning construction; narrative
oral development; conversational interaction and how it relates to
individual variables; first language use; feedback on written
production; intercultural awareness raising and feedback on
diagnostic assessment. It will be of interest to undergraduate and
graduate students, researchers, teachers and stakeholders who are
interested in research on how children learn a second language at
primary school.
This book presents research on the learning of foreign languages by
children aged 6-12 years old in primary school settings. The
collection provides a significant and important contribution to
this often overlooked domain and aims to provide research-based
evidence that might help to inform and develop pedagogical
practice. Topics covered in the chapters include the influence of
learner characteristics on word retrieval; explicit second language
learning and language awareness; meaning construction; narrative
oral development; conversational interaction and how it relates to
individual variables; first language use; feedback on written
production; intercultural awareness raising and feedback on
diagnostic assessment. It will be of interest to undergraduate and
graduate students, researchers, teachers and stakeholders who are
interested in research on how children learn a second language at
primary school.
The last three decades have witnessed a growth of interest in
research on tasks from various perspectives and numerous books and
collections of articles have been published focusing on the notion
of task and its utility in different contexts. Nevertheless, what
is lacking is a multi-faceted examination of tasks from different
important perspectives. This edited volume, with four sections of
three chapters each, views tasks and Task-based Language Teaching
(TBLT) from four distinct (but complementary) vantage points. In
the first section, all chapters view tasks from a
cognitive-interactionist angle with each addressing one key facet
of either cognition or interaction (or both) in different contexts
(CALL and EFL/ESL). Section two hinges on the idea that language
teaching and learning is perhaps best conceptualized, understood,
and investigated within a complexity theory framework which
accounts for the dynamicity and interrelatedness of the variables
involved. Viewing TBLT from a sociocultural lens is what connects
the chapters included in the third section. Finally, the fourth
section views TBLT from pedagogical and curricular vantage points.
Since the introduction of communicative language teaching,
collaborative learning has played an important role in the second
language (L2) classroom. Drawing from sociocultural theory, which
states that human cognitive development is a socially situated
activity mediated by language, studies in L2 pedagogy advocate the
use of tasks that require learners to work together. Collaborative
dialogue encourages language learning, and research shows that the
solutions reached by students in this process are more often
correct with a lasting influence on their language comprehension.
This volume includes ten chapters that illustrate the benefits of
collaborative dialogue in second foreign language classrooms. The
volume considers key issues dealing with collaborative tasks and
implications for language teaching.
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