English language teaching methods and language learning styles have changed dramatically over the past decade in Asia and the surrounding regions. Huge efforts are being made by teachers from the K-12 system, as well as at the tertiary level, to move away from the traditional Grammar-Translation Method towards more communicative approaches to teaching and learning, including the use of project and task-based learning and technology-enhanced language learning, just to name a few of the more frequently used methodologies. In this book, the authors shed light on the changes in ELT in Asia and the region over the past 10 years or so as seen in the wider context of language policy, which puts greater value on the acquisition of English and the new directions in learner-centered classrooms which encourage student autonomy and voice and place students as active decision-makers in the learning process.With the title of "Departing from Tradition: Innovations in English Language Teaching and Learning", this book showcases some of the innovations in ELT that are currently happening in this rapidly growing field. Given the growing importance of English and the enormous energy and enthusiasm in the region for learning the language in both formal and informal contexts, ELT will continue to flourish. This volume will offer insights into the tremendous changes that have been made in secondary and university English language classrooms across the region.
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Preface |
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Acknowledgements |
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Introduction |
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Part I Involving Students in Teaching |
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Chapter One Classroom Management for English Language Teachers: A Course Model in Pre-Service Teacher Preparation |
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Chapter Two The Basics of Peer Tutoring: A Qualitative Analysis of the Peer Tutors' Experiences |
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Part II Teaching Methodologies |
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Chapter Three Seeing "Creating, Learning and Teaching" as Overlapping Co-Constructed Concepts: Making School a Very Exciting Place! |
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Chapter Four To "Flip" or Not to "Flip": That is the Question |
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Part III Developing Second Language Writing |
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Chapter Five Study of a Reading-Writing Project Based on Connectionism in Chinese EFL Classrooms |
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Chapter Six L2 Learners' Perceived Ability to Avoid Plagiarism while Writing from Sources |
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81 | (17) |
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Chapter Seven Corrective Feedback Strategies for Improvement in the Writing Accuracy of Students in a Chinese Medium-of-Instruction (CMI) Secondary School |
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98 | (14) |
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Part IV Encouraging Language Study through Technology |
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Chapter Eight Design Innovations in an ELT E-Textbook |
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112 | (16) |
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Chapter Nine Innovative Reading Support for Non-Native Readers of University Digital Texts |
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128 | (20) |
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Part V Developing Second Language Speaking and Vocabulary |
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Chapter Ten We Pre-empt Your Regular Teaching to Bring You this Bulletin: An Instructional Perspective on Interruptions |
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Chapter Eleven Using Register in Student Conversations: A Way to Build a Context of Situation |
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Chapter Twelve Incidental Vocabulary Acquisition from Reading and Listening: The Effects of Word Exposure Frequency |
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Chapter Thirteen Assessing Explicit Phonological Knowledge: Preliminary Evidence and Implications |
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208 | (16) |
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Chapter Fourteen Analyzing and Revising a Diagnostic Speaking Test for Local Officials |
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224 | (15) |
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Contributors |
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Dr Evelyn Doman is Associate Professor of TESOL in the School of Education at the University of Guam. Evelyn received her doctorate in Applied Linguistics from Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia, and has taught ESL and EFL for the past 20 years at various universities in Korea, Japan, the United States, Macau, and Guam. Her research interests include learner autonomy, Processability Theory, focus on form instruction, and, most recently, the flipped language classroom.Jay Bidal has been teaching EAP and ESL for more than 20 years in a variety of contexts, including Japan, Turkey, Canada, the UAE, and, currently, Macau. He possesses extensive material writing experience, having been a co-writer on four different locally-produced textbooks, and having served as the project manager and editor of an innovative EAP e-textbook published in 2014. He is interested in writing instruction, curriculum and materials development, grammar pedagogy, and the integration of technology in teaching.