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Research on foreign language learning, teaching, and assessment in Sweden 2012–2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-03-21 Camilla Bardel, Henrik Gyllstad, Jörgen Tholin
This review provides an account of salient research topics in current Swedish research in the field of foreign language (FL) education, with the aim of making locally published work available outside Sweden. A corpus of work on English and other FLs published between 2012 and 2021 has been scrutinized. Focus has been placed on research conducted and disseminated in Sweden, in some cases adding international
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Research ethics in applied linguistics Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-02-27 Katherine Yaw, Luke Plonsky, Tove Larsson, Scott Sterling, Merja Kytö
For many researchers in the social sciences, including those in applied linguistics, the term ethics evokes the bureaucratic process of fulfilling the requirements of an ethics review board (e.g., in the US, an Institutional Review Board, or IRB) as a preliminary step in conducting human subjects research. The expansion of ethics review boards into the social sciences in the early 2000s has led applied
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The ethical turn in writing assessment: How far have we come, and where do we still need to go? Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-02-23 Martin East, David Slomp
Both of us were drawn into the writing assessment field initially through our lived experiences as schoolteachers. We worked in radically different contexts – Martin was head of a languages department and teacher of French and German in the late 1990s in the UK, and David was a Grade 12 teacher of Academic English in Alberta, Canada, at the turn of the twenty-first century. In both these contexts,
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Speech acts and interaction in second language pragmatics: A position paper Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-02-03 Juliane House, Dániel Z. Kádár
In this position paper, we argue that second language (L2) pragmatic research needs to explore new avenues for integrating speech acts and interaction, by proposing a radically minimal, finite and interactional typology of speech acts. While we will introduce what we mean by integrating speech acts and interaction in detail below, the following argument helps us to summarise the issue we consider in
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How does having a good ear promote successful second language speech acquisition in adulthood? Introducing Auditory Precision Hypothesis-L2 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-01-25 Kazuya Saito
In this paper, I first provide a brief review of how scholars have conceptualized, tested, and elaborated aptitude frameworks relevant to second language (L2) speech learning. Subsequently, I introduce an emerging paradigm that assigns a fundamental role to domain-general auditory processing (i.e., having a good ear) in L1 speech acquisition and proposes that the same faculty acts as a cornerstone
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JD Brown's essential bookshelf: Connected speech Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-01-16 James Dean Brown
James Dean Brown (“JD”) is Professor Emeritus of Second Language Studies at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. He has spoken and taught in places ranging from Albuquerque to Zagreb and published hundreds of articles and 27 books on language testing, curriculum design, research methods, and connected speech. His books on reduced forms and connected speech are: Perspectives on teaching connected speech
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How effective is second language incidental vocabulary learning? A meta-analysis Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-01-13 Stuart Webb, Takumi Uchihara, Akifumi Yanagisawa
There is a great deal of variation in gains found between studies of second language (L2) incidental vocabulary learning, as well as many factors that affect learning. This meta-analysis investigated the effects of exposure to L2 meaning-focused input on incidental vocabulary learning with an aim to clarify the proportional gains that occur through meaning-focused learning. Twenty-four primary studies
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Publishing in predatory language and linguistics journals: Authors’ experiences and motivations Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-01-10 Hassan Nejadghanbar, Guangwei Hu, Maryam Jahangiri Babadi
This study examines the experiences and motivations of language and linguistics academics who have published in potential predatory journals (PPJs). A questionnaire was administered to 2,793 academics with publications in 63 language and linguistics PPJs, and 213 of them returned their responses. A subsample of the respondents (n = 21) also contributed qualitative data through semi-structured interviews
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Pauline Foster's essential bookshelf: Oral fluency in a second language Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Pauline Foster
Pauline Foster was Professor of Applied Linguistics at St. Mary's University until her retirement in 2020, and is currently a Senior Research Associate at University College, London. Pauline has published her research widely, including papers on task-based language performance, classroom interaction, idiomaticity, and the development of instruments for oral language analysis. Pauline's i-10-index is
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Self-assessment in second language learning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2023-01-09 Yuko Goto Butler
Self-assessment (SA), as an activity for reflecting on one's own performance and abilities (Black & Wiliam, 1998), has been a topic of interest to educators over the years. Among second language (L2) educators, SA began growing in popularity in the 1970s and 1980s, when L2 educators’ focus shifted from analyzing linguistic systems to examining how learners learn a language. Many can-do statements and
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Student support and teacher education in English for Academic Purposes and English Medium Instruction: Two sides of the same coin? Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-11-18 Ursula Wingate
The massive increase in the use of English Medium Instruction (EMI) in universities around the world has been accompanied by an ever-growing body of publications. The majority focus on EMI policies, teacher identities, and teachers’ and students’ attitudes towards EMI, whilst there seems to be little research into pedagogical approaches to language and literacy support for students as well as into
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Ema Ushioda's essential bookshelf: Teacher engagement with classroom motivation research Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-11-16 Ema Ushioda
Ema Ushioda is a professor and Head of the Department of Applied Linguistics at the University of Warwick. She has been interested in motivation and autonomy in language learning for over 30 years, particularly from pedagogical and qualitative research perspectives. Recent books include Teaching and researching motivation (3rd ed.), co-authored with Zoltán Dörnyei (Routledge, 2021), and Language learning
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Language teaching and learning in Ireland: 2012–2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-11-03 Marie-Thérèse Batardière, Sarah Berthaud, Bronagh Ćatibušić, Colin J. Flynn
The language teaching landscape in Ireland has changed considerably over the last 30 years as a result of substantial and sustained inward migration into the country during this period. These social and demographic developments have added to the country's already bilingual context and created a much more varied multilingual landscape than had existed in previous decades. They have also impacted various
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Complex dynamic systems theory: A webinar with Diane Larsen-Freeman Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-10-26 Diane Larsen-Freeman
The following is an edited transcript of a webinar that took place on 11 June 2022 between Diane Larsen-Freeman and seven colleagues (in alphabetical order: Anne Burns, Hossein Farhady, Mathias Schulze, Scott Thornbury, Benjamin White, Henry Widdowson, and Yasin Yazdi-Amirkhiz), who generously took the time to formulate and submit questions in advance of the webinar and to participate in the event
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Vocabulary learning at first exposure: Replication of Gullberg et al. (2012) and Shoemaker and Rast (2013) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-09-21 Imma Miralpeix
This article puts forward several proposals for replicating two well-known First Exposure studies dealing with the earliest stages of adult second language acquisition. Both of them enquire into the word-level knowledge that complete beginners are able to extract from minimal input when exposed to a new language for the first time. They also focus on several input variables that may enhance learning
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Should linguistics be applied and, if so, how? Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-09-06 Lydia White
Research on second language (L2) acquisition in the generative tradition (GenSLA) addresses the nature of interlanguage competence, examining the roles of Universal Grammar, the mother tongue and the input in shaping the acquisition, representation and use of second languages. This field is sometimes dismissed by applied linguists as irrelevant because it does not provide direct applications for language
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The final frontier? Why we have been ignoring second language attrition, and why it is time we stopped Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-08-29 Monika S. Schmid
Instructed foreign language knowledge – that is, language skills acquired exclusively in the classroom without the benefit of any significant immersion experience – remains a vastly neglected area of studies on language learning in general and language attrition in particular. There is also little consideration of foreign language attrition and maintenance as a problem for policy or pedagogy. The present
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Rod Ellis's essential bookshelf: Focus on form Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-08-25 Rod Ellis
Rod Ellis is a Distinguished Research Professor at Curtin University (Perth, Australia) and also, an Emeritus Distinguished Professor at the University of Auckland (New Zealand). He has also worked in universities in UK, Japan, and the USA and is a fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand. He has published widely in the related fields of second language acquisition research and task-based language
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Ecological systems theory and second language research Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-08-05 Sin Wang Chong, Talia Isaacs, Jim McKinley
“Context” has been increasingly featured and acknowledged in second language (L2) research because L2 teaching is recognised to be shaped by the environments in which it is situated. Numerous theoretical perspectives were introduced to L2 research that aim to capture the contextual forces at work in teaching and learning, including but not limited to Activity Theory, Complexity Theory, and Sociocultural
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TESOL teacher educators in higher education: A review of studies from 2010 to 2020 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-07-28 Rui Yuan, Icy Lee, Peter I. De Costa, Min Yang, Shuwen Liu
Despite the wide recognition of language teacher educators’ contributions in the field of Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL), research on language teacher educators has only picked up the pace in the last decade, shedding light on their cognition, practices, and identities in relation to various personal, interpersonal, and contextual factors. This article provides a systematic
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Native-speakerism and non-native second language teachers: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-07-21 Enric Llurda, Júlia Calvet-Terré
A lot of attention has been devoted in the last 30 years to understanding nativeness and what has traditionally been called non-nativeness. While many studies have attempted to problematize the dichotomic division between so-called native speakers and non-native speakers, several others have specifically focussed on the language teaching profession in order to understand aspects related to identity
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Explicit and implicit knowledge and learning of an additional language: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-07-19 Karen Roehr-Brackin
This paper puts forward a research agenda in the area of explicit and implicit knowledge and learning of second or additional languages. Based on a brief overview of reliable findings as well as open questions in the field, three agenda items are highlighted. First, valid and reliable measures of explicit and, in particular, implicit knowledge and learning need to be identified and their suitability
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Webinar on the subject of English and applied linguistics Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-07-19 Henry Widdowson
In my presentation I argue, not for the first time, the need to rethink orthodox ideas about the relationship between applied linguistics and English language teaching that have been promoted in the past and still prevail. I will do this by taking up issues in questions that I invited colleagues to send me in advance; issues that I have discussed elsewhere, most recently in Widdowson (2019, 2020).
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Analysing culture in language learning materials Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-07-08 Karen Risager
This introduction contains three parts: First, a presentation of the timeline, including the selection of target languages. Second, an overview of trends of development in the international research field from the 1960s up until today. Third, a list of categories used in the subsequent table of annotated works.
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Martin East's essential bookshelf: Task-based language teaching Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-06-24 Martin East
Martin East is Professor of Language Education in the School of Cultures, Languages and Linguistics, the University of Auckland, New Zealand. Prior to this, he spent ten years as a language teacher educator in the University's Faculty of Education and Social Work. He has also taught languages at a broad range of proficiency levels and in a variety of contexts, including leading a school languages department
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What's in a name? Why ‘SLA’ is no longer fit for purpose and the emerging, more equitable alternatives Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-06-24 Jason Anderson
Comments from the reviewers ‘ … very well-written, well-presented, and well-argued, fulfiling the aim of addressing critically an aspect of applied linguistics/SLA about which the author is clearly passionate and challenging the ubiquity, appropriateness and current relevance of the term “second language acquisition”’. ‘An essay which is at once elegant, eloquent, erudite, critical, creative, and constructive
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Using social networking sites as a language teaching and learning environment Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-06-22 Jessie S. Barrot
The growing adoption of emerging technologies for language pedagogy, literacy development, and language assessment has accelerated computer-assisted language learning (CALL) as a major field of education and led to the establishment of major specialized journals, such as Language Learning and Technology, Computer Assisted Language Learning, and ReCALL. As technologies further advanced, we began to
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Materials use in language classrooms: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-06-22 Anne Marie Guerrettaz, Corinne S. Mathieu, Siwon Lee, Adon Berwick
How language learners and teachers actually use pedagogical materials in classrooms is a ‘groundbreaking’ subject of applied linguistics inquiry (Tarone, 2014, p. 653), referred to in this research agenda article as materials use. We begin with a theoretically-oriented overview of language education scholarship on pedagogical materials (henceforth materials). Then, we focus on seven qualitative research
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Vocabulary learning from reading and listening: Replications of Brown et al. (2008) and Vidal (2011) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-06-10 Raquel Serrano
There has been a great deal of interest in second language vocabulary studies regarding the potential of reading as a source of incidental vocabulary learning. More recently, several studies have also focused on comparing reading with other input modes, such as listening, or reading-while-listening. Among these studies there are two – Brown et al. (2008) and Vidal (2011) – that have been extensively
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Language learning and emotion Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Luke Plonsky, Ekaterina Sudina, Yasser Teimouri
Language learning can be very emotional, as anyone who has ever tried to learn or use another language (L2) will attest. The range of emotions varies widely in both type and intensity, from the thrill of successfully articulating yourself, for example, to the anxiety of navigating a high-stakes encounter in an L2. It is not surprising, therefore, that there is a longstanding tradition of research on
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The relation of second language acquisition, instructed second language acquisition, and language teaching from the lens of second language tense-aspect Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-05-16 Kathleen Bardovi-Harlig, Llorenç Comajoan-Colomé
This article examines the relationships between second language acquisition (SLA), instructed second language acquisition (ISLA), and language teaching by examining them from the lens of the research on the acquisition and teaching of second language (L2) tense-aspect in the last 20 years (2000–2021). Review 1 examines 56 instructional effect studies on the acquisition of L2 tense-aspect, and Review
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Second language speech comprehensibility Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-05-12 Dustin Crowther, Daniel Holden, Kristen Urada
Published in Language Learning in 1995, Munro and Derwing's* investigation of foreign accent, comprehensibility, and intelligibility in second language (L2) speech instigated significant change in L2 pronunciation research (Levis, 2020). A key finding was that despite the presence of a foreign accent, listeners could indeed comprehend L2 speech. Within their framework, comprehension of L2 speech was
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Plagiarism and English for academic purposes: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-04-22 Diane Pecorari
Plagiarism is a consistent source of concern for educators, and particularly so for English for Academic Purposes (EAP) practitioners, whose objective is to equip students for success across the curriculum. Plagiarism has been on the EAP research agenda for some 35 years and remains a topic of considerable research interest. While perceptions of plagiarism have been extensively investigated, a number
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Norbert Schmitt's essential bookshelf: Formulaic language Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-04-21 Norbert Schmitt
In this series, Language Teaching invites a well-established scholar to make a personal choice of 12 works that he or she regards as essential reading for those interested in an historical and contemporary overview of the key work in the area chosen for study.
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Multilingualism in academic writing for publication: Putting English in its place Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-04-07 Mary Jane Curry, Theresa Lillis
We are living in an era characterized by multilingualism, global mobility, superdiversity (Blommaert, 2010), and digital communications. Mobility and multilingualism, however, have long characterized most geolinguistic contexts, including those where monolingual ideologies have influenced the formation of contemporary nation states (Cenoz, 2013). As language is a pillar of both curriculum and instruction
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English Medium Instruction: What do we know so far and what do we still need to find out? Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-04-07 Ernesto Macaro
English Medium Instruction (EMI), as a phenomenon occurring in the non-Anglophone world, has been matched by a growth in research output on the topic and is now an important and established field of study. A great deal of research attention has been devoted to attitudes held by the key stakeholders in this form of education: teachers, students, and policy makers. Yet, there are many other important
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The third wind of language learning strategies research Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-04-06 Nathan Thomas,Heath Rose,Andrew D. Cohen,Xuesong (Andy) Gao,Akihiko Sasaki,Teresa Hernandez-Gonzalez
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Second language writing from a complex dynamic systems perspective Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-04-01 Gary G. Fogal
This work provides a chronological and thematic account of empirical studies and position papers on second language (L2) writing scholarship from a complex dynamic systems theory (CDST) perspective. As a theoretical framework, CDST was formally introduced into applied linguistics research by Diane Larsen-Freeman in 1994 (Larsen-Freeman, 1994). However, more than a decade passed before CDST-L2 writing
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Transitioning from conversation analysis to mixed methods Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-03-24 Paul Seedhouse
This reflective piece tells the story of how I started out doing Conversation Analysis (CA) and have been transitioning into doing mixed methods for some years now. My basic argument is that language learning talk is too complex a phenomenon to analyse using a single methodology. Specifically, it is extremely difficult to isolate from the interaction concrete evidence of the learning of specific individual
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Second or foreign language learning through watching audio-visual input and the role of on-screen text Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2022-01-10 Maribel Montero Perez
This article discusses research into the role of audio-visual input for second language (L2) or foreign language learning. It also addresses questions related to the effectiveness of audio-visual input with different types of on-screen text such as subtitles (i.e., in learners’ first language) and captions (i.e., subtitles in the same language as the L2 audio) for L2 learning. The review discusses
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Defining English Medium Instruction: Striving for comparative equivalence Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-27 Heath Rose, Ernesto Macaro, Kari Sahan, Ikuya Aizawa, Sihan Zhou, Minhui Wei
English Medium Instruction (EMI) has been defined as ‘the use of the English language to teach academic subjects (other than English itself) in countries or jurisdictions where the first language (L1) of the majority of the population is not English’ (Macaro, 2018, p. 19). This definition has proved to be controversial but has underpinned the work of our research group, from whose collective perspective
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Corpora in applied linguistics: Broadening the agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Robbie Love,Gavin Brookes,Niall Curry
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Integrating research into language teaching and learning: Learners and teachers as co-researchers exploring praxis Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Judith Hanks
Classroom research has long been recommended as a fruitful avenue for English language teaching (ELT) in applied linguistics. Yet recognition of the value of practitioners exploring their own praxis has only recently come to the fore. In this plenary, I focus on Exploratory Practice, a form of ‘fully inclusive practitioner research’, in which learners as well as teachers are invited to integrate research
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The interaction of working memory capacity and engagement with recasts on different L2 outcome measures: A replication of Révész () Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-22 Javad Alipour, Maryam Mohebi, Ali Roohani
We report on a conceptual replication of Révész (2012) in order to investigate the idea whether learners provided with recasts do engage in different kinds of behavioral engagement as a function of their working memory and if/how this engagement comes to bear on performance on different measures. Engagement with recasts was measured through a coding method categorizing responses to the recasts running
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Virtual professional development project on secondary teachers’ awareness of race, language, and culture Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-07 Nicole King,Kim H. Song,Gregory Child
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Applied corpus linguistics for language acquisition, pedagogy, and beyond Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-06 Ute Römer
This plenary speech provides an overview of applications of corpus research in several core areas of applied linguistics, including second language acquisition and language assessment. It does this by showcasing a number of recent studies carried out by or with involvement of the author. These studies all focus on phraseological aspects of language and demonstrate the importance of studying its patterned
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Evidence in favor of a strategy-based model for English pronunciation instruction Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-02 Veronica G. Sardegna
Research has increasingly demonstrated that pronunciation difficulties in English can seriously affect learners’ intelligibility and ability to comprehend spoken English. It is thus crucial that we find ways of helping learners of English become more intelligible. In this talk, I present compelling research evidence in support of a strategy-based pronunciation instruction model, and uncover individual
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Language socialization and academic discourse in English as a Foreign Language contexts: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-12-02 Debra A. Friedman
In this paper, I argue for expanding language socialization research on the academic discourse socialization of speakers of English as an additional language to less-commonly researched settings outside of English-dominant countries. Following an overview of some theoretical and methodological issues involved in conducting such research, I lay out a research agenda, focusing on several topics and issues
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From replication to substantiation: A complexity theory perspective Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-11-23 Ali H. Al-Hoorie, Phil Hiver, Diane Larsen-Freeman, Wander Lowie
In contemporary methodological thinking, replication holds a central place. However, relatively little attention has been paid to replication in the context of complex dynamic systems theory (CDST), perhaps due to uncertainty regarding the epistemology–methodology match between these domains. In this paper, we explore the place of replication in relation to open systems and argue that three conditions
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Translanguaging in education Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-11-17 Florence Bonacina-Pugh, Ildegrada da Costa Cabral, Jing Huang
This state-of-the-art review focuses on translanguaging in education. In recent years, scholars have engaged in the conceptualisation of ‘translanguaging’ (e.g. García, 2009; García & Wei, 2014a; Wei, 2018) as well as in conducting a vast and ever-increasing number of empirical studies, in educational contexts in particular. This article aims to take stock of the different ways in which ‘translanguaging’
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Collaborative writing in L2 classrooms: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-10-18 Mimi Li, Meixiu Zhang
Research on second language (L2) collaborative writing (CW) has proliferated over the recent decade and will continue to bloom due to the changing landscape of writing and learning in the digital age. This article provides a research agenda on CW in L2 classrooms. We illustrate six research themes for future research inquiry by pointing out the research gap, following a brief review of theoretical
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Research synthesis in applied linguistics: Facilitating research-pedagogy dialogue Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-10-08 Sin Wang Chong
Objectives The primary aim of this seminar was to promote the values and practices of research synthesis (a systematic form of secondary research – see Chong and Plonsky (2021a) for a typology of different forms of research synthesis) in applied linguistics and language education in advancing research and researchpractice conversations. Moreover, as a seminar that had a methodological rather than substantive
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Replicating corpus-based research in English for academic purposes: Proposed replication of Cortes (2013) and Biber and Gray (2010) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-10-07 Taha Omidian, Oliver James Ballance, Anna Siyanova-Chanturia
Accurate description of language use is central to English for academic purposes (EAP) practice. Thanks to the development of corpus tools, it has been possible to undertake systematic studies of language in academic contexts. This line of research aims to provide detailed and accurate characterization of academic communication and to ultimately inform EAP practice. Very few studies, however, have
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Selected poster presentations from the American Association of Applied Linguistics conference 2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Christine M. Tardy,Hongni Gou
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Language, literacies and learning in the disciplines: A higher education perspective Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-09-15 Doris Dippold,Marion Heron,Karen Gravett
An interesting debate emerged out of this session: is collaboration between colleagues in the disciplines and those specialising in language and language support best facilitated through top-down approaches by which universities, for example, mandate a certain level of language proficiency and put structures in place to support language development beyond pre-sessional and in-sessional support? Students
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Glossing and vocabulary learning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-09-02 Frank Boers
This article offers a critical review of research on the use of glossing and its contribution to second language (L2) vocabulary acquisition. Discussion topics include the complexity of estimating the effectiveness of glossing relative to reading non-glossed texts, the quest for optimal implementations of glossing, issues of ecological validity, and ambiguity around the nature of vocabulary learning
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Selected poster presentations from the American Association of Applied Linguistics conference 2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-08-06 Jamie Morgan,Valentina Michelotti,Meg Montee
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Selected poster presentations from the American Association of Applied Linguistics conference 2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-08-02 Naoya Shibata
1. Literature review 1.1. Lexical diversity Lexical diversity (LD) has been defined as ‘the range of vocabulary and avoidance of repetition’ (Malvern et al., 2004). LD is still perceived as an indicator of second language (L2) writers’ writing abilities (Engber, 1995; Vo, 2019). As the illustrative indices to assess LD, the measure of textual lexical diversity (MTLD) and vocd-D are often utilised in
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Selected poster presentations from the American Association of Applied Linguistics conference 2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-08-02 Kailin Liu,Julie Choi
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Selected poster presentations from the American Association of Applied Linguistics conference 2021 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.769) Pub Date : 2021-08-02 Chaoran Wang,Ying Luo