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This collection explores student mobility and study abroad
programmes across Europe, presenting original research on personal,
linguistic, and intercultural development during study abroad
experiences. The volume synthesizes work from the 2016-2020 Cost
Action 15130 'Study Abroad Research in European Perspective'
research network, offering a multidisciplinary account of the
intersection of language learning and study abroad in Europe amidst
the changing contemporary higher education landscape, as well as
new directions for future research. The initial section comprises
short survey chapters outlining key themes and literature,
connecting traditional study abroad research with new multilingual
and transnational realities. This is supported by a main section
containing original empirical studies in a wide range of European
contexts and a short afterword bringing together policy and
pedagogical proposals. Taken together, the collection shines a
light on the impact of the internationalisation of higher education
on linguistic dimensions of student mobility while including a
range of lesser studied settings and languages. New insights are
offered on language learning, identity, interculturality, student
agency and motivation, and transnational social networks in the
study abroad context. This book will be of particular interest to
students, researchers and institutions interested in the
intersection of language learning and study abroad, including such
areas as multilingualism, higher education, and applied
linguistics.
Anglophone students abroad: Identity, social relationships and
language learning presents the findings of a major study of British
students of French and Spanish undertaking residence abroad. The
new dataset presented here provides both quantitative and
qualitative information on language learning, social networking and
integration and identity development during residence abroad. The
book tracks in detail the language development of participants and
relates this systematically to individual participants' social and
linguistic experiences and evolving relationship. It shows that
language learning is increasingly dependent on students' own agency
and skill and the negotiation of identity in multilingual and
lingua franca environments.
Critical thinking is a major and enduring aspect of higher
education and the development of criticality in students has long
been a core aim. However, understandings of criticality are
conceptually and empirically unclear. The book combines a well
developed conceptual discussion of the nature of criticality
appropriate for the twenty-first century, the extent to which it is
attainable by arts and social science undergraduates, and the paths
by which it is developed during students' higher education
experiences. Drawing upon empirical accounts and case studies of
teaching and learning in different disciplines, this book
critically analyses higher education curriculum and policy
documentation to explore higher educational processes, encouraging
a re-evaluation of practice and educational values, and enabling
the development of curricula which incorporate systematic attention
to the development of student criticality. This book proposes a
rounded conceptual vision of criticality in higher education for
the twenty-first century.
Written by a team of leading experts working in different SLA
specialisms, this fourth edition is a clear and concise
introduction to the main theories of second language acquisition
(SLA) from multiple perspectives, comprehensively updated to
reflect the very latest developments SLA research in recent years.
The book covers all the main theoretical perspectives currently
active in SLA and sets each chapter within a broader framework.
Each chapter examines the claims and scope of each theory and how
each views language, the learner and the acquisition process,
supplemented by summaries of key studies and data examples from a
variety of languages. Chapters end with an evaluative summary of
the theories discussed. Key features to this fourth edition include
updated accounts of developments in cognitive approaches to second
language (L2) learning, the implications of advances in generative
linguistics and the "social turn" in L2 research, with re-worked
chapters on functional, sociocultural and sociolinguistic
perspectives, and an entirely new chapter on theory integration, in
addition to updated examples using new studies. Second Language
Learning Theories continues to be an essential resource for
graduate students in second language acquisition.
This collection explores student mobility and study abroad
programmes across Europe, presenting original research on personal,
linguistic, and intercultural development during study abroad
experiences. The volume synthesizes work from the 2016-2020 Cost
Action 15130 'Study Abroad Research in European Perspective'
research network, offering a multidisciplinary account of the
intersection of language learning and study abroad in Europe amidst
the changing contemporary higher education landscape, as well as
new directions for future research. The initial section comprises
short survey chapters outlining key themes and literature,
connecting traditional study abroad research with new multilingual
and transnational realities. This is supported by a main section
containing original empirical studies in a wide range of European
contexts and a short afterword bringing together policy and
pedagogical proposals. Taken together, the collection shines a
light on the impact of the internationalisation of higher education
on linguistic dimensions of student mobility while including a
range of lesser studied settings and languages. New insights are
offered on language learning, identity, interculturality, student
agency and motivation, and transnational social networks in the
study abroad context. This book will be of particular interest to
students, researchers and institutions interested in the
intersection of language learning and study abroad, including such
areas as multilingualism, higher education, and applied
linguistics.
Written by a team of leading experts working in different SLA
specialisms, this fourth edition is a clear and concise
introduction to the main theories of second language acquisition
(SLA) from multiple perspectives, comprehensively updated to
reflect the very latest developments SLA research in recent years.
The book covers all the main theoretical perspectives currently
active in SLA and sets each chapter within a broader framework.
Each chapter examines the claims and scope of each theory and how
each views language, the learner and the acquisition process,
supplemented by summaries of key studies and data examples from a
variety of languages. Chapters end with an evaluative summary of
the theories discussed. Key features to this fourth edition include
updated accounts of developments in cognitive approaches to second
language (L2) learning, the implications of advances in generative
linguistics and the "social turn" in L2 research, with re-worked
chapters on functional, sociocultural and sociolinguistic
perspectives, and an entirely new chapter on theory integration, in
addition to updated examples using new studies. Second Language
Learning Theories continues to be an essential resource for
graduate students in second language acquisition.
Anglophone students abroad: Identity, social relationships and
language learning presents the findings of a major study of British
students of French and Spanish undertaking residence abroad. The
new dataset presented here provides both quantitative and
qualitative information on language learning, social networking and
integration and identity development during residence abroad. The
book tracks in detail the language development of participants and
relates this systematically to individual participants' social and
linguistic experiences and evolving relationship. It shows that
language learning is increasingly dependent on students' own agency
and skill and the negotiation of identity in multilingual and
lingua franca environments.
Critical thinking is a major and enduring aspect of higher
education and the development of criticality in students has long
been a core aim. However, understandings of criticality are
conceptually and empirically unclear. The book combines a well
developed conceptual discussion of the nature of criticality
appropriate for the twenty-first century, the extent to which it is
attainable by arts and social science undergraduates, and the paths
by which it is developed during students' higher education
experiences. Drawing upon empirical accounts and case studies of
teaching and learning in different disciplines, this book
critically analyses higher education curriculum and policy
documentation to explore higher educational processes, encouraging
a re-evaluation of practice and educational values, and enabling
the development of curricula which incorporate systematic attention
to the development of student criticality. This book proposes a
rounded conceptual vision of criticality in higher education for
the twenty-first century.
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