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Cover image for Second and foreign language learning through classroom interaction
Title:
Second and foreign language learning through classroom interaction
Publication Information:
New Jersey, NJ : Lawrence Erlbaum, 2000
Physical Description:
xii, 314 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780805835137

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30000010214758 P53.447 D48 2000 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This volume brings together the current theoretical interest in reconceptualizing second and foreign language learning from a sociocultural perspective on language and learning, with practical concerns about second and foreign language pedagogy. It presents a set of studies whose focus is on the empirical description of particular practices constructed in classroom interaction that promote the learning of a second or foreign language. The authors examine in detail the processes by which the learning of additional languages is accomplished in the interaction of a variety of classrooms and in a variety of languages. Not only will the findings from the studies reported in this volume help to lay a foundation for the development of a more expansive, sociocultural model of second and foreign language learning, but on a more practical level they will help language educators in creating a set of principles for identifying and sustaining classroom interactional practices that foster additional language development.

The volume is distinguished in three ways:
* Following a Vygotskyan perspective on development, the studies assume that language learning is a fundamentally pragmatic enterprise, intrinsically linked to language use. This breaks from a more traditional understanding of second and foreign language learning, which has viewed learning and use as two distinct phenomena. The importance of classroom interaction to additional language development is foregrounded.
* The investigations reported in this book are distinguished by their methodological approach. Because language learning is assumed to be a situated, context-sensitive, and dynamic process, the studies do not rely on traditional experimental methods for collecting and analyzing data, but rather, they involve primarily the use of ethnographic and discourse analytic methods.
* The studies focus on interactional practices that promote second and foreign language learning. Although a great deal of research has examined first language learning in classrooms from a sociocultural perspective, little has looked at second and foreign language classrooms from such a perspective. Thus there is a strong need for this volume of studies addressing this area of research.

Researchers, teacher educators, and graduate students across the fields of second and foreign language learning, applied linguistics, and language education will find this book informative and relevant. Because of the programmatic implications arising from the studies, it will also appeal to teacher educators and teachers of second and foreign languages from the elementary to the university levels.


Table of Contents

Preface
The Development of Second and Foreign Language Learning Through Classroom InteractionJ.K. Hall and L.S. Verplaetse
Part I Classroom Interaction and Foreign Language Learning
Learning the Pragmatics of Solidarity in the Networked Foreign Language ClassroomC. Kinginger
Rethinking Recasts: A Learner-Centered Examination of Corrective Feedback in the Japanese Language ClassroomA.S. Ohta
Spoken Artistry: Performance in a Foreign Language ClassroomP.N. Sullivan
Teachers' Action and Student Oral Participation in Classroom InteractionD.A. Consolo
Repetition in Foreign Language Classroom InteractionP.A. Duff
Social Interaction and Language Development in a FLES ClassroomE. Takahashi and T. Austin and Y. Morimoto
Part II Classroom Interaction and Second Language Learning
How Teachers Can Build On Student-Proposed Intertextual Links to Facilitate Student Talk in the ESL ClassroomM. Boyd and V.M. Maloof
Teacher Questions as Scaffolded Assistance in an ESL ClassroomD.E. McCormick and R. Donato
Identity and Ideology: Culture and Pragmatics in Content-Based ESLD. Boxer and F. Cortés-Conde
Mr. Wonder-ful: Portrait of a Dialogic TeacherL.S. Verplaetse
A Different Teacher Role in Language Arts Education: Interaction in a Small Circle With TeacherR. Damhuis
Creating a Language-Promoting Classroom: Content-Area Teachers at WorkM. Hajer
Classroom Interaction and Additional Language Learning: Implications for Teaching and ResearchJ.K. Hall
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