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El. knyga: Doing SLA Research with Implications for the Classroom: Reconciling methodological demands and pedagogical applicability

Edited by (University of Maryland), Edited by (University of Southern California)
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"This book is unique in bringing together studies on instructed second language acquisition that focus on a common question: 'What renders this research particularly relevant to classroom applications, and what are the advantages, challenges, and potential pitfalls of the methodology adopted?' The empirical studies feature experimental, quasi-experimental and observational research in settings ranging from the classroom to the laboratory and CALL contexts. All contributors were asked to discuss issues ofcost, ethics, participant availability, experimental control, teacher collaboration, and student motivation, as well as the generalizability of findings to different kinds of educational contexts, languages, and structures. This volume should be of interest to graduate students in second language research, practicing teachers who want some guidance to navigate the sometimes overwhelming array of publications, and to researchers who are planning studies on instructed second language learning or teaching and are looking to make principled decisions on which of the existing methodologies to adopt"--

This book is unique in bringing together studies on instructed second language acquisition that focus on a common question: “What renders this research particularly relevant to classroom applications, and what are the advantages, challenges, and potential pitfalls of the methodology adopted?” The empirical studies feature experimental, quasi-experimental and observational research in settings ranging from the classroom to the laboratory and CALL contexts. All contributors were asked to discuss issues of cost, ethics, participant availability, experimental control, teacher collaboration, and student motivation, as well as the generalizability of findings to different kinds of educational contexts, languages, and structures.
This volume should be of interest to graduate students in second language research, practicing teachers who want some guidance to navigate the sometimes overwhelming array of publications, and to researchers who are planning studies on instructed second language learning or teaching and are looking to make principled decisions on which of the existing methodologies to adopt.
Chapter 1 Current research on instructed second language learning: A bird's eye view
1(8)
Robert DeKeyser
Goretti Prieto Botana
Chapter 2 Observing language-related episodes in intact classrooms: Context matters!
9(22)
Laura Collins
Joanna White
Chapter 3 Methodological strengths, challenges, and joys of classroom-based quasi-experimental research: Metacognitive instruction and corrective feedback
31(24)
Masatoshi Sato
Shawn Loewen
Chapter 4 Integrating instructed second language research, pragmatics, and corpus-based instruction
55(28)
Kathleen Bardovi-Harlig
Sabrina Mossman
Yunwen Su
Chapter 5 The roles of explicit instruction and guided practice in the proceduralization of a complex grammatical structure
83(24)
Natsuko Shintani
Chapter 6 The effects of recasts versus prompts on immediate uptake and learning of a complex target structure
107(20)
Hossein Nassaji
Chapter 7 The effects of multiple exposures to explicit information: Evidence from two types of learning problems and practice conditions
127(28)
Goretti Prieto Botana
Robert DeKeyser
Chapter 8 CALL in ISLA: Promoting depth of processing of complex L2 Spanish "Para/Por" prepositions
155(24)
Ronald P. Leow
Luis Cerezo
Allison Caras
Gorky Cruz
Chapter 9 Lexical development in the writing of intensive English program students
179(22)
Alan Juffs
Chapter 10 Discussion: Balancing methodological rigor and pedagogical relevance
201(16)
Nina Spada
Index 217