Fr. 69.00

Referent Similarity and Nominal Syntax in Task-Based Language Teaching

English · Hardback

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Description

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This volume addresses an important gap in the literature on task design and second language use. Building on insights from over 50 years of research on the relationship between task demands and language use, it examines how referent similarity relates to developmentally-relevant variation in the use of nominal structures, comparative structures and abstract lexis among first and second language speakers of English. In addition to providing an empirical basis for future research on tasks, it shares both theoretical and practical information on task design, which will greatly benefit curriculum and material developers.

List of contents

Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. L2 Performance and Incidental SLA.- Chapter 3. Referential Communication and L2 Production.- Chapter 4. Tasks in L2 Syllabus Design.- Chapter 5. Referent Similarity.- Chapter 6. Referent Similarity and L2 Production.- Chapter 7. Methods.- Chapter 8. Results.- Chapter 9. Referent Similarity and TBLT.- References.- Appendix 1. Materials for the Study.- Appendix 2. Noun Phrase Coding Manual.- Appendix 3. Full Descriptive Statistics for NP Complexity.

About the author










Craig Lambert is an Associate Professor of Applied Linguistics and TESOL at Curtin University in Perth, Australia.  He has taught in post-graduate TESOL programs at Anaheim University in the United States and at Lancaster University in the United Kingdom, and has more than 20 years of hands-on teaching experience in Japan, where he worked as an English teacher, course coordinator and teacher trainer.  His research on second language speech processing, syntactic development, task-based learning and learner engagement has been published internationally.

Summary

This volume addresses an important gap in the literature on task design and second language use. Building on insights from over 50 years of research on the relationship between task demands and language use, it examines how referent similarity relates to developmentally-relevant variation in the use of nominal structures, comparative structures and abstract lexis among first and second language speakers of English. In addition to providing an empirical basis for future research on tasks, it shares both theoretical and practical information on task design, which will greatly benefit curriculum and material developers.

Product details

Authors Craig Lambert
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.03.2019
 
EAN 9789811330889
ISBN 978-981-1330-88-9
No. of pages 154
Dimensions 161 mm x 239 mm x 16 mm
Weight 404 g
Illustrations XIV, 154 p. 26 illus.
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

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