Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
, 156–7 Learner English (2001) 217 learning strategies 113
Download 1.11 Mb. Pdf ko'rish
|
cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
155, 156–7
Learner English (2001) 217 learning strategies 113, 113–19 see also L1 learning; L2 learning research into 105–6, 113–17 teaching materials 118 vocabulary 51–2, 57–62 Learning to Learn English (1989) 41, 118 Leather, J. 83 Lee, D.J. 27 left-corner parsing 128 Levenston, E. 63 lexical relations 54–5, 60, 63–4 Lexical Semantics (1986) 54–5 Libben, G. 60 Libre Echange (1995) 173 Lightbown, P. 60, 227 linguistic archistrategy 110 linguistic competence see competence linguistic imperialism 191, 195, 199, 200–1 Linguistic Minorities Project (UK) 141 linguistic relativity 56–7 listening 125–33 teaching materials 129, 130, 131 teaching techniques 129–33, 162 Listening File, The (1989) 130 literature, and language teaching 240, 255 Little, David 159 Live Action English (2000) 131, 253 Living with People (1983) 139, 248, 255 local languages 190, 191 locality principle 34, 35, 215 location, absolute 57 Long, John 124 Long, Mike 39–40, 42, 163, 225, 227 Lozanov, G. 267, 268 Lyster, Roy 226, 227 Macaro, Ernesto 62, 105, 115, 116, 117, 182, 227 MacWhinney, Brian 219 mainstreaming 206 Major, Roy 77 Making Sense of Spelling and Pronunciation (1993) 100–1 Makino, T. 27 Malaysia, language curriculum 101–2, 210 Mandarin see Chinese mands 221, 251 marginalization 141, 142 Marks, J. 80 Marton, W. 235, 265 Matombo, A.R. 122 matrix language frame model 177 Mayo, Garcia 226 McArthur, T. 171 McCarthy, M. 61, 139, 248, 253, 261 McClelland, J.L. 221 McDonough, Steve 115, 132 McLaughlin, B. 221 Mead, M. 164 meaning 51, 53–7 components 53, 54 prototype theory 53, 55–6 schema theory 121–2 scripts 122–5 teaching techniques 62–4 meaning-based writing systems 87, 88, 89, 90 Medgyes, P. 186, 187 Meeting People (1982) 118, 139, 255 memory 145 and background knowledge 122, 124 declarative vs. procedural 218, 221 learning strategies 116 mnemnotechnics 57, 62 processability model 128, 221–2 word retrieval 126 word-storage 52–3, 61–2 Mennen, I. 84 metacognitive strategies 113, 115, 116, 118 metaphors 54 Miller, L. 130 Index 301 miming, as communication strategy 107 ‘minimal pairs’ technique 70, 82 Minimalist Program 214, 217 minority languages 190, 191, 207 MLF model (matrix language frame) 177 mnemnotechnics 57, 62 Modern Languages Aptitude Test (MLAT) 144–5 Mohamed, S. 139, 173 monolingual mode 174, 175 monolingualism, attitudes to 142–3 Montague, N.S. 183 moral values 10 Morgan, James 42, 216 Morizumi, E. 179 morphemes 24, 25–7, 177, 217 morphology 24, 25–8 Morrow, Keith 252 motherese 161, 225 motivation 136, 136–40, 159, 223 Move (2007) 37, 173, 264 movement 28, 29–30, 34 multi-competence 11, 15–16, 211–12, 231, 231–3 multidimensional model see processability model multilingualism 190–1, 194, 195, 197–9 India 201–2 Murphy, R. 20, 239 music, and language learning 137, 267, 268 Myers, J. 100–1 Myers-Scotton, Carol 177 Myhill, M. 201, 211 Naiman, N. 113–14 NASA Manual 20 Nation, Paul 54 National Curriculum (UK) 209, 210 native speakers 2, 170–4, 171 see also L1 as models for L2 learners 5, 38, 64, 78–80, 172–3, 186–7, 188–9 as teachers 185–9 Natural Approach, The (1983) 162 negation 156 negotiation for meaning 225, 225–6, 227 Nelson, K.E. 225 Nemser, William 71 Neufeld, G. 148 New Concurrent Method 179, 183 New Crown English (2002) 179 New Cutting Edge (2005) 249 New English File (2004) 55, 81, 100, 158, 173, 184 New Headway Beginners (2002) 70, 150, 243, 265 Newport, E.L. 148 Newson, M. 217 Northern Territory (Australia) 211 notions 247 nouns, grammatical properties 50, 51 nuclear tone 83 number 44 see also plurals Nunan, D. 32, 184, 259–60 official languages 195, 197, 206–7 Ohta, Amy 230 O’Malley, J.M. 115–16, 118, 128, 221 ontology phylogeny model 77 opposites 55 order of acquisition see sequence of acquisition order of difficulty 24, 27–8 orthographic regularities 90, 91 Oxenden, C. 55, 81, 100, 158, 173, 184 Oxford, R. 113, 116, 118, 119, 152 Palmer, Harold 40, 264 Panorama (1996) 184 parameters, language 33, 34, 35–6, 40, 214, 215, 216, 217 paraphrasing 107 Parminter, S. 37, 264 parsing 125, 126–8 passive sentences 44 pattern practice 22 Paulston, C. 199 pedagogy see teaching People and Places (1980) 63, 139, 166, 209, 255 periods (full stops) 96 peripheral languages 190, 191, 207 personality, effect on language learning 152 Peters, R.S. 136 Phillipson, Robert 200 phonemes 69, 69–73 English 68 and writing systems 70 phonemic coding ability 144, 145 phonetic alphabet 67, 67–8, 81 phonetics 67 phonology 67, 69–78 phrase structure 21, 25, 34, 44 see also structural grammar parsing 126–8 teaching materials 264 Pienemann, M. 31 Pike-Baky, M. 20, 32 Index 302 plurals 20 see also number politeness 166, 167, 178 politics, and language 10, 79, 191, 194–5, 199, 200–1, 210 Poplack, Shona 176–7 Porte, G. 188 Post, B. 83 post-listening stage 129 postfigurative culture 161, 164 Postovsky, V. 132 Poulisse, Nanda 109–10 Prabhu, N.S. 157–8, 163, 259, 263 practice 60–1, 70, 81–2, 222 Practice of English Language Teaching (2007) 265 pragmatic competence 23 pre-listening stage 129 prefigurative culture 161, 164 prefixes 51 prepositions 44 stranding 30 prescriptive grammar 19, 19–20, 24 Present-day English for Foreign Students (1964) 239 presystemic stage, L2 learning 71 principles and parameters grammar 33–6 interlanguages 34, 35–6 principles of language 33, 34, 214, 215, 216 pro-drop parameter 35–6, 40, 214, 215, 216, 217 problem solving, communication strategies 107–9 procedural memory 218, 221 processability 28 processability model 28–33, 218–22 pronouns 44 pronunciation 50, 67–86 consonant clusters 74–5 and identity 7–8 teaching materials 70, 80, 81, 84–5 teaching techniques 80–5, 148, 246 and transfer 71, 76–7 Pronunciation Book, The (1992) 80 Pronunciation of English, The (2000) 70 prototype theory 53, 55–6 punctuation 19, 95–7 questions 29–30, 34, 45 quotation marks 96 Rampton, Ben 172 Ramsey, C. 148 Ranta, Leila 226, 227 reading 121–5 transfer from L1 93–4 Realistic English (1968) 243 recasts 225, 226, 227 Received Pronunciation (RP) 78, 78–9, 186–7 reciprocal language teaching 183, 187 refugees 141, 198 Regan, V. 171 Reibel, David 271 relative clauses 38 religion, supercentral languages 191, 196–7 repair 165, 167–8 repetition 60–1, 70, 81–2, 222, 244–5 response 155, 156 Rhodes, N.C. 183 Richards, J. 235 Richards, J.C. 20, 100, 173, 216 Riley, Philip 41, 194, 196 Ringbom, Hakan 60 Rivers, Wilga 41, 243, 245, 258–9 Robinson, Peter 146 Rodgers, T. 235 role plays 249 Roller, C.M. 122 Romijn, E. 131, 132, 253 Rosch, Eleanor 55 Rossier, J. 152 RP (Received Pronunciation) 78, 78–9, 186–7 Rudzka, B. 54 Rumelhart, D.E. 221 Sampson, G.P. 164 Sassoon, Rosemary 90 Saunders, George 196 Saussure, Ferdinand de 252 Sauveur, Lambert 160 scaffolding 227, 228, 229–30 Schank, R. 122–3 Schegloff, E.A. 166, 167–8 schema (schemata) 121, 121–2, 128 Schmidt, Norbert 59 Schmidt, R.W. 136 school grammar see traditional grammar scientific writing 200–1 script 121 scripts 122–5, 128 SeaSpeak (1988) 204 Secombe, M. 201 second language 2, 11, 12 see also L2 learners; L2 learning; L2 users second language acquisition research see SLA research second language teaching see teaching Index 303 Seedhouse, Paul 166, 168, 257 Seely, M. 131, 132, 253 Segalowitz, N.S. 124 Seidlhofer, Barbara 192–3 self-directed learning 118 Selinker, Larry 14 semantics see meaning semicolons 96 sensitization 39, 41 separation 141, 142 sequence of acquisition 24, 26–8 sequence of development 28, 29–31, 37–8 sex differences, in L2 learning ability 152 Sharwood-Smith, Mike 216 Shaw, George Bernard 171 Sheen, Ronald 152 Sheen, Younghee 227 Ship or Sheep? (1981) 70 silent letters 90, 92–3 Silent Way 267 simplification 74, 77 simulated learning experiments 221 Sinclair, B. 41, 118 Sinclair, J. 156, 240 Singleton, David 148–9 situation 263, 263–4 Situational English (1967) 264 situational learning 150 Skehan, Peter 145, 152, 260 skills, audio-lingual approach 242, 244 Skinner, B.F. 221 Skuttnab-Kangas, T. 206, 207, 210 SLA research applications to teaching 8–10 background 1, 2, 6–16 bilingualism 182 independence from language teaching 11–12 key findings 7–8 learning strategies 105–6, 113–17 models of L2 learning 214–34, 250, 251 terminology 12 Slater, S. 124, 253 ‘smile factor’ 253 Smith, B. 217 Smolicz, J.J. 201 Snow, C. 147–8 Soars, L. & J. 70, 150, 243, 253, 265 social communicative teaching 252–3 social strategies 113, 115, 116, 119 socio-educational model 222–4 sociocultural SLA theory 228–30 sociolinguistic variation 38, 64–5, 83, 172–3 spelling 99–100 SOS teaching method 263–6 sound-based writing systems 87, 88–90 Spada, N. 227 Spanish-English language users 72 Sparks, Richard 145–6 Spell It Right (Write/Rite/Wright) 101 spelling 19, 50, 70, 90–5 importance 4 teaching materials 100–1 teaching techniques 98–102 Spolsky, B. 149–50, 234 Sridar, K.K. & S.N. 231 standardization 194 Stansfield, C. 151 status 19, 78–9, 196, 197 stereotyping 123, 138–9, 223 Stern, David 5, 171, 256 Strategy Inventory for Language Learning (1990) 116 Streets, L. 195 structural grammar Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
Ma'lumotlar bazasi mualliflik huquqi bilan himoyalangan ©fayllar.org 2024
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling