Reprint

Second Language Acquisition and Language Education – Bridging the Interface

Edited by
May 2024
252 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1118-2 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1117-5 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Second Language Acquisition and Language Education – Bridging the Interface that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Emerging in the 1970s, second language acquisition (SLA) is now a long-established field, illuminating the complexity of language learning among learners in different learning contexts, ages, and developmental stages from diverse perspectives. As an independent field within Applied Linguistics, drawing on a range of cognate fields reflecting its interdisciplinary underpinnings, the field offers a diverse range of potential insights for language practitioners. The latter include language instructors but also language education policy makers, those involved in language testing, and learners themselves. While language acquisition and language education are often confounded, the specificity of their focus is different. Notwithstanding, there is a natural interface between an acquisitional approach and an educational focus to learning a second language. That interface extends beyond instructed second language acquisition (ISLA) as a sub-field of SLA, where there is a strong focus on classroom input exposure conditions. This volume includes, but also goes beyond, ISLA to consider the interface between SLA and language education as a means of exploring a non-exhaustive range of insights that SLA can provide on the learning process of relevance to language practitioners and other stakeholders. The presentation showcases the scope for SLA and language education practitioners and stakeholders to engage in mutually beneficial dialogue.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
flow; emergency remote teaching; in-person teaching; English Foreign Language; bilingual education; CLIL; English level; pre-service teachers; English-medium instruction; questions; interaction; higher education; teacher training; CEFR; sociolinguistic competence; French as a second language; teacher practice; learners’ self-identified needs; learning investment; language learning; higher education; motivation; needs; engagement; agency; L2 quantitative research; audiovisual input; young learners; foreign language learning; reading skills; listening skills; individual differences; English Language Teaching (ELT); curricular reforms; teachers’ perception; curricular appropriation; generalist teachers; rural schools; extensive reading; graded readers; academic vocabulary learning; receptive vocabulary; listening narrative comprehension; bilinguals; school readiness; alignment; interaction; priming; turn-taking; dialogue; conversation; unscripted tasks; foreign language; second language; task-based language teaching; task-based needs analysis; second language acquisition theories; task-based language teaching (TBLT); L2 pronunciation instruction; L2 pronunciation training; task-based pronunciation teaching (TBPT); form-focused communicative instruction; L2 vowel perception and production; map task; dialogs; question types; vocabulary; multilingual children; nasal vowels; L3 French; L1 Japanese; orthographic effect; crosslinguistic influence; longitudinal; spoken and written corpus; n/a

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