-
Research agenda: Synergizing in-class and out-of-class language learning with technology Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-23
Chun Lai, Pia SundqvistThe prevalence of digital technologies, augmented by the emergence of generative AI, expands opportunities for language learning and use, empowers new modes of learning, and blurs the boundaries of in-class and out-of-class language learning. The language education community is challenged to reconceptualize the paradigm of language learning and utilize the affordances of technologies to synergize in-class
-
From revolution to evolution: What generative AI really means for language learning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-14
Mark PegrumHistory is littered with unfulfilled promises that emerging technologies – from radios to televisions, and from computers to mobile phones – would completely transform teaching and learning. Now the same promises are being made of generative artificial intelligence (AI). This presentation argues that we should not be focusing on educational revolution, but instead on educational evolution. Education
-
Language teacher educator psychology: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-05-08
Mehmet Sak, Rui YuanDespite the central role of language teacher educators (LTEs) in contributing to the development of language teachers in higher education and non-higher education contexts, there is a lack of theoretical and empirical work on their professional lives. One such area that remains largely unexplored concerns the psychology of LTEs. This paper argues for the need to embrace a research program that systematically
-
Research in English language teaching and learning in Singapore: 2017–2023 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-25
Sally Ann Jones, Chin Ee Loh, Robbie Lee SabnaniThis review on English language teaching (ELT) in Singapore examines 159 empirical research studies published between 2017 and 2023 in both internationally recognised peer-reviewed journals and less well-known regional journals. With this comprehensive review, we aim to raise awareness of ELT research in Singapore for international, regional, and local readership. This will also serve as a starting
-
Research agenda on well-being and language education Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-23
Sarah Mercer, Carlos Murillo-MirandaThis article advocates for the expansion of research into the topic of well-being in language education. It begins by outlining key definitional concerns and then moves to outline general issues and gaps in the current body of research such as a need for a diversification in research in social contexts, working conditions, languages, cultures, as well as a clarification of the domain specificity of
-
A critical review of L2 teaching and learning research in Japan (2019–2023) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-16
Terasawa Takunori, Segawa HazukiIn our critical review, we explore the progress of second language (L2) teaching research in Japan from 2019 to 2023, focusing particularly on English Language Teaching (ELT) and Japanese Language Teaching (JLT). After scrutinising numerous publications from over 50 academic journals, as well as academic books and chapters, we selected around 40 studies for analysis. These studies met our screening
-
Is planning time beneficial for anaphora resolution? A corpus-based study of L1 Spanish–L2 English learners Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-10
Elena García-Guerrero, Cristóbal LozanoPrevious research has investigated the effect of planning time (PT) on L2 learners’ production regarding fluency, complexity, and accuracy, but its influence at the discourse level has been overlooked. Thus, this study explores the influence of PT on learners’ written performance regarding anaphora resolution (AR) and their pragmatically (in)felicitous choices of referring expressions (REs) in discourse
-
Bilingual education in Spain: A critical review of stakeholders' perceptions Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-04-02
Ramiro Durán-Martínez, Alberto Fernández-CostalesDuring the past 20 years, the expansion of bilingual education programmes in Spain has generated a situation where the voices of stakeholders frequently go unheard. Accordingly, this paper is a critical review of bilingual programmes within the Spanish context. An analysis has been carried out on stakeholder perceptions, that is, of teachers, students, management teams, and families, as reflected in
-
Research agenda: From monolingual to multilingual norms in multilingual classrooms Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-20
Barbara Hofer, Ulrike JessnerThe present contribution proposes a low-threshold action plan for research into what we consider critical areas in multilingualism where we see an urgent need for more empirical studies and research-based classroom interventions and a stronger commitment to multilingual standards both in research and teaching. Reaching out to a wide audience of researchers, educationalists and decision makers, we first
-
Does being gay motivate the language learning journey of a sexually marginalised ‘refugee’? Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-12
Junjie Li, Zi WangI have an idea that some men are born out of their due place. Accident has cast them amid certain surroundings, but they have always a nostalgia for a home they know not. They are strangers in their birthplace … Perhaps it is this sense of strangeness that sends men far and wide in the search for something permanent, to which they may attach themselves … Sometimes a man hits upon a place to which he
-
Assessment of second language fluency Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-05
Parvaneh TavakoliInvestigating speech fluency has, for a long time, been at the core of second language (L2) studies, as fluency is believed to epitomise successful acquisition of L2, characterise effective communication, elucidate the complex process of acquisition, and predict L2 speakers' proficiency. The significance attributed to fluency in these areas explicates the research attention paid to it over the past
-
Machine translation and language teaching and learning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-03-04
Jason Jolley, Luciane MaimoneDecades before educators were forced to confront the disruption posed by widely accessible generative artificial intelligence (AI) tools such as ChatGPT, language learners, instructors, and researchers began dealing with its game-changing predecessor: machine translation (MT). Researchers began assessing MT systems and proposing language teaching applications for them as soon as universities and schools
-
Empowering minds: The role of disciplinary literacies in English-medium internationalised universities Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-02-28
Emma DafouzAs higher education increasingly embraces internationalisation, the surge in demand for English as the medium of education (EME) poses significant challenges for stakeholders. This keynote places disciplinary literacies (DLs), defined as the ability to appropriately participate in the communicative practices of a discipline (Airey, 2011), centre stage as a crucial construct for effective teaching and
-
Corpus linguistics for language teaching and learning: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-02-27
Niall Curry, Tony McEneryThis agenda identifies future research trajectories for the corpus revolution, proposing five specific research tasks designed to explore and advance the application of corpus linguistics in language education. These tasks focus on: (1) contrastive data-driven learning, (2) the development of corpus research for informing national language curricula, (3) the use of artificial intelligence for corpus
-
Practitioners respond to Widdowson and Yazdi-Amirkhiz “Webinar on the subject of English and applied linguistics”. Language Teaching, 56, 393–401 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-02-14
Mark McAndrewsIn their “Webinar on the subject of English and applied linguistics”, Widdowson and Yazdi-Amirkhiz (2023) argues for the need to “rethink orthodox ideas about the relationship between applied linguistics and English language teaching that have been promoted in the past and still prevail” (p. 393). In the following commentary, I describe examples from my experiences as a language teacher and teacher
-
A critical review of English medium instruction (EMI) teacher development in higher education: From 2018 to 2022 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-01-30
Kailun Wang, Rui Yuan, Peter I. De CostaThe past few years have witnessed an emergent growth of both academic and practical works on English medium instruction (EMI) teachers' professional development. This paper presents a critical analysis of 30 empirical studies on EMI teacher development in a wide range of higher educational settings from 2018 to 2022. Through a systematic process of paper selection and review, we have identified three
-
Practitioners respond to Kathleen Graves’ ‘Mind the gap: A tale of two curriculum fallacies’ Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-01-27
Emily Yuko Cousins, Peter BreretonAs Kathleen Graves argues in her 2023 article, the belief that students learn best when teachers deliver a curriculum exactly as written is a common fallacy, based on an underlying assumption that ‘the institutional curriculum is the most important determinant of what happens in the classroom’ (p. 200). Graves stresses that, in reality, the institutional curriculum itself does not guarantee effective
-
The timing of corrective feedback in second language learning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2025-01-27
Shaofeng Li, Ling Ou, Icy LeeThe timing of corrective feedback (CF), alternatively called feedback timing, refers to the choice of a timepoint for providing corrections on second language (L2) errors or making comments on the appropriacy of L2 learners' verbal or nonverbal behaviors. A typical distinction related to the notion of feedback timing is between immediate and delayed feedback, but what constitutes immediate or delayed
-
A personal bookshelf of foreign language aptitude publications Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-12-20
Peter SkehanLike many in the profession, from the United Kingdom certainly, the teaching of English was a second, or more accurately, third career for me. After periods as a clinical psychologist and primary school teacher, the lure of travel took me to France. The need to earn money, the discovery that the choices about how to do this were limited, led to a move into teaching English as a Foreign Language. And
-
Research into practice: Digital multimodal composition in second language writing Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-12-13
Shulin Yu, Emily Di Zhang, Chunhong LiuDigital multimodal composing (DMC) has been valued as an engaging pedagogy in language teaching and learning in recent decades. Although research on DMC is flourishing and evidences its benefits for students' development as second language (L2) users and writers, there are some missing links between research findings and classroom practices. In this article, we examine three kinds of relationships
-
Linguistic complexity in second language writing: Insight from studies on task planning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-12-12
Mark D. Johnson, Mahmoud Abdi TabariTask planning and its effect on the complexity of second language (L2) written production have been studied extensively. However, the results of these studies are inconclusive, and at times contradictory, potentially as a result of variation in metrics of linguistic complexity. This study is an extension of earlier research syntheses and quantitative meta-analyses on the effects of planning on oral
-
Systematic review, systematic bias? An example from EMI research Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-12-10
Timothy Hampson, Jim McKinleyBased on the rigorous systematicity assumed in systematic review methodology, it is no surprise that a prominent review such as Macaro et al.'s (2018) on English medium instruction (EMI) has been used as a basis for subsequent EMI research. However, in this article, we explore the ways in which the focus of systematic reviews can be necessarily narrowed and how this poses a risk to research when readers
-
Teaching for transfer of second language learning: A proposed research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-12-05
Mark Andrew JamesStudents' learning transfer is a fundamental goal across contexts of second language (L2) teaching and is therefore a worthwhile topic for L2 teaching research. Building on trends in research on teaching for transfer in L2 education and in other education and training contexts, this article proposes an agenda for future research on teaching for transfer of L2 learning. This includes a description of
-
The native/non-native debate: A practitioner responds Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-11-15
Carol GriffithsIt is, perhaps, with some surprise that I find the native/non-native divide again attracting attention. The first I remember of this being an issue was when we were informed that the native speaker was dead (Paikeday, 1985). Needless to say, to those of us who did not feel at all deceased, this came as a surprise, but the announcement certainly attracted attention. The next contribution to the debate
-
The effects of enhancing L2 multiword items in captions: An approximate replication of Majuddin, Siyanova-Chanturia, and Boers (2021) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-11-04
Elvenna Majuddin, Frank Boers, Anna Siyanova-ChanturiaStudies investigating the acquisition of multiword items (MWIs) from reading have furnished evidence that the likelihood of acquisition improves considerably if such items are typographically enhanced (e.g., bolded or underlined) in the texts. In the case of captioned audio-visual materials, however, an earlier study by the authors did not find such compelling evidence. In that study, indications of
-
Replication research in L2 collaborative writing: Replications of Fernández Dobao (2012) and Bikowski and Vithanage (2016) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-10-21
Matt KesslerOver the past two decades in the applied linguistics subfield of second language (L2) writing, there has been considerable interest in the topic of collaborative writing (CW). Studies in this domain have investigated different phenomena such as the nature of learner-to-learner interactions, the learning outcomes of CW, and students' perceptions of these activities when implemented in the classroom
-
Examining lexical profile in general-audience English podcasts: A close replication of Nurmukhamedov and Sharakhimov (2021) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-10-14
Hong Yu, Ju WenWe closely replicated Nurmukhamedov and Sharakhimov (2021), which was the first study to examine the lexical profile of general-audience English podcasts. Nurmukhamedov and Sharakhimov (2021) found that podcast listeners should have a knowledge of the most frequent 3,000 word families and 5,000 word families, respectively, plus proper nouns, marginal words, transparent compounds, and acronyms in order
-
The complexity of teaching Hebrew in Israel's Arab school system Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-10-10
Rama Manor, Ali WatadThis paper discusses the complexities of teaching Hebrew to Israel's largest minority group, the Arabs, who must be fluent in the language if they are to succeed. While policy-making institutions in Israel today are aware of the importance of Hebrew for Arab students, the teaching of Hebrew faces serious challenges involving the status of Hebrew in Arab society, the inner-Arab state of diglossia, and
-
Language teacher expertise research: A theoretical case and research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-10-07
Jason AndersonExpertise exists among all communities of educational practitioners at all levels and in all national contexts. By identifying expert practitioners, learning from them and valuing their professional competence, researchers can support, promote and build upon sustainable, embodied, holistic models of quality in ways that have direct relevance for the classroom, the curriculum and wider educational goals
-
Privilege and prejudice in private online English teaching: Discourses in school-owned recruitment websites Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-10-07
Ephraim V. DomingoNumerous studies have analyzed various aspects of English language teaching to uncover discriminatory employment practices within the field. However, there is a gap in the research regarding the discourses present in school-managed teacher recruitment websites (TRWs), particularly in the field of private online language education (POLE). This study aims to address this gap by investigating how the
-
Data-driven learning: From Collins Cobuild Dictionary to ChatGPT Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-05-30
John FlowerdewThe invitation to speak at this conference on corpora and data-driven language learning (DDL) at COSEDI, the University of Grenoble, was received at the beginning of February 2023. ChatGPT had been released on 30 November 2022 and it was already becoming obvious that this technology would present revolutionary opportunities and challenges for corpus applications to language learning. Through a limited
-
Review of selected research in applied linguistics published in Australia (2015–2022) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-05-28
Rhonda Oliver, Honglin Chen, Sender DovchinThis article provides a review of research in applied linguistics published in Australia in the period 2015–2022. Primarily, it is based on articles from Australian publications as material from other sources is more widely available to an international audience. The research has been published in such journals as the Australian Journal of Language and Literacy, Australian Review of Applied Linguistics
-
Replication research in the domain of perceived L2 fluency: Approximate and close replications of Kormos and Dénes (2004) and Rossiter (2009) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-05-10
Viktoria MagneThe primary objective of this paper is to contribute to the advancement of second language (L2) fluency research by outlining a specific proposal for future replication studies. The overarching goal is to assess the generalisability of the original findings of the two influential studies in the area of perceived fluency: Kormos and Dénes (2004) and Rossiter (2009). This objective will be achieved by
-
Cognitive linguistics-inspired language instruction Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-05-08
Jie Qin, Dilin Liu, Lei LeiSecond language acquisition (SLA) or second/foreign language teaching has been influenced to various degrees by key linguistic theories, including structural linguistics (Bloomfield, 1933; Saussure, 1959), generative linguistics (Chomsky, 1957, 1965), systemic functional linguistics (Halliday, 1973), and, more recently, contemporary Cognitive Linguistics (CL; Goldberg, 1995; Lakoff, 1987, 1993; Langacker
-
Digital multimodal composing in L2 classrooms: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-05-03
Lianjiang (George) Jiang, Christoph HafnerResearch on digital multimodal composing (DMC) in second language (L2) classrooms has proliferated considerably in recent years, to a large extent in response to the changing digital and multimodal communication landscape. This article offers a research agenda on DMC in L2 classrooms. We begin with a theoretically oriented overview of DMC scholarship. We then examine seven research themes for future
-
Practitioners respond to Carol Griffiths ‘What about the teacher?’ (Language Teaching, 56(2), 210–222) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-04-24
Wayne TrotmanI read Carol Griffiths' article with great interest. This is due in part to being in what I feel is a privileged position as book reviewer for a UK journal, the EL Gazette,1 for whom I have read several titles by authors she references on teacher wellbeing, such as Mercer and Gregersen (2020). I wondered, however, why Brierton and Gkonou (2022) was not listed there as it also deals with issues raised
-
How do language education researchers attend to quality in qualitative studies? Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-04-09
Seyyed-Abdolhamid Mirhosseini, William S. PearsonThe steady expansion in qualitative research in the area of language education over the last two decades indicates the growing recognition of its importance to investigating issues of language teaching and learning. Along with this recognition, understanding and assessing the quality of qualitative studies in this area has gained increasing significance. Addressing this concern, in this research synthesis
-
Language assessment literacy Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-04-03
Karin Vogt, Henrik Bøhn, Dina TsagariNumerous references to ‘new’ literacies have been added to the discourse of various academic and public domains, resulting in a multiplication of literacies. Among them is the term ‘language assessment literacy’ (LAL), which has been used as a subset of Assessment Literacy (AL) (Gan & Lam, 2022) in the field of language testing and assessment and has not been uncontested. LAL refers to the skills,
-
Measuring children's metalinguistic awareness Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-02-19
Karen Roehr-BrackinResearch into young learners' metalinguistic awareness has led to both definitions of the construct and key findings about its role in children's cognitive and linguistic development. I briefly summarise this research before introducing two established theoretical models that can help us understand the concept of metalinguistic awareness more broadly: Ellen Bialystok's classic dichotomy of analysis
-
Value your students' bilingualism? Nurture them through development of school-based registers! Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-02-12
Mary J. SchleppegrellAs a language teacher, teacher educator, and researcher over the past 40 years, my interests have been centered in classrooms where students are learning something else while also learning language. In the 1980s, as an English as a Foreign Language (EFL) teacher, my students were learning ‘English for specific purposes,’ where they brought knowledge from their fields, working as economists, in business
-
Classroom-based extensive reading: a review of recent research Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-02-07
Thomas N. Robb, Doreen EwertThis survey of recent research on extensive reading (ER) for language learners focuses on ER in the classroom. While early adopters of ER imagined the quick emergence of an intrinsically motivated independent reader, the reality of much classroom-based language learning is that without considerable teacher guidance and supportive transitional activities, students are not likely to reach self-motivated
-
Learning a specialized register: An English for Specific Purposes research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-01-31
Helen BasturkmenIncreased work connectivity and study mobility over national boundaries in recent decades has led to a shift in the kind of English as a Second Language (ESL) instruction implemented in many educational institutions. Instruction to develop learners’ general English language proficiency may appear as a time-consuming and abstract endeavour. Instead, many institutions implement English for Specific Purposes
-
Written corrective feedback in second language writing: A synthesis of naturalistic classroom studies Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2024-01-29
Zhicheng Mao, Icy Lee, Shaofeng LiWritten corrective feedback (WCF) is a ubiquitous pedagogical activity in second language (L2) classrooms and has become a key area of inquiry in L2 writing research. While there have been several reviews on experimental WCF research, there is not yet a synthesis of naturalistic classroom studies where the type and amount of feedback provided on students' writing performance is not manipulated or controlled
-
Reducing ‘avoidable research waste’ in applied linguistics research: Insights from healthcare research Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-12-18
Talia Isaacs, Hamish ChalmersThis paper explores Chalmers and Glasziou's (2009) notion of ‘research waste’ from healthcare research to examine what it can offer the field of applied linguistics. Drawing on examples from both disciplines, we unpack Macleod et al.'s (2014) five research waste categories: (1) asking the wrong research questions, (2) failing to situate new research in the context of existing research, (3) inefficient
-
Navigating the research–practice relationship: Professional goals and constraints Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-12-14
Masatoshi SatoIn this article, which is based on my AAAL 2023 plenary talk, I argue that researchers may be contributing to widening the never-ending gap between research and practice. At least, there is such a possibility given that researchers, including myself, have rarely investigated their own beliefs and practices related to classroom teaching. In the first part, I overview research of the research–practice
-
Issues of equity and inclusion in Virtual Exchange Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-11-06
Robert O'DowdThe increasing recognition of the limitations of physical mobility programs has led Foreign Language departments to consider online approaches such as Virtual Exchange (VE) and Blended Mobility as alternatives in international education. These online approaches have the potential to promote inclusion and diversity by providing opportunities for student cohorts who are unable to participate in traditional
-
Linking second language speaking task performance and language testing Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-10-18
Peter SkehanThis written version of a plenary to the Language Testing Research Colloquium relates research into second language speaking task performance to language testing. A brief review of models of communicative competence and of speaking is provided. Then, two major areas within testing are discussed: the concepts of difficulty and ability for use. The next section covers research into spoken task-based
-
Research on “native” and “non-native” English-speaking teachers: Past developments, current status, and future directions Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-09-26
Ali Fuad Selvi, Bedrettin Yazan, Ahmar MahboobRecently, we have been witnessing the emergence of scholarly interest and professional advocacy efforts centering on systemic, intersectional, fluid, and contextualized inequalities and dynamic hierarchies constructed by essentialized and idealized (non)native speakerhood (speakerism/speakering) and its personal and professional implications for English language teaching (ELT) profession(als). This
-
Second language speech comprehensibility: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-09-22
Dustin Crowther, Daniel R. IsbellInterest in second language (L2) speech comprehensibility, or listeners’ perceived ease or difficulty of understanding a given utterance, has seen continual growth since Munro and Derwing's (1995) seminal publication in Language Learning. While recognizing the body of knowledge that has developed in the 25 plus years since Munro and Derwing's study, in the present paper we look to the future as we
-
Mixed-methods research in applied linguistics: Charting the progress through the second decade of the twenty-first century Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-09-08
A. Mehdi Riazi, Mohammad Amini FarsaniThis review of recent scholarship (RRS) paper is a follow-up of the first, published in this journal in 2014. For this RRS paper, we identified and included 304 mixed-methods research (MMR) papers published in 20 top-tier applied linguistics (AL) journals. We used a six-pronged quality and transparency framework to review and analyze the MMR studies, drawing on six quality frameworks and transparency
-
Localising linguistic citizenship in England Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-07-28
Ben Rampton, Melanie Cooke, Dermot Bryers, Becky Winstanley, Constant Leung, Anthony Tomei, Sam HolmesWhat's the relevance of ‘Linguistic Citizenship' (LC), a concept developed in southern Africa, to language education in England? LC is committed to democratic participation and voice, to linguistic diversity and the value of sociolinguistic understanding (Stroud 2001), and it provides a framework for contesting linguistic conditions in England, where vernacular multilingualism faces monolingual language
-
Whose open science are we talking about? From open science in psychology to open science in applied linguistics Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-07-27
Meng Liu“An extremely timely, thoughtful, and well-informed discussion in applied linguistics and beyond concerning open science. The essay seeks to engage with a broad audience and to dispel some of the persisting myths around open science and would be read fruitfully by many in the field”.
-
How do second language learners go about their listening when they view captioned videos? Replication studies of Taylor (2005), Winke et al. (2013) and Rodgers and Webb (2017) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-07-13
Michael YeldhamIn recent years, interest in using captioned videos for second language learning has grown immensely, partly owing to the explosion of available materials and the rapid increase in viewing platforms. The captioning affords many learners access to authentic videos ordinarily out of their reach, and teachers often employ the videos to help improve their learners’ listening. However, there is the view
-
Applied linguistics and language education research in Turkey: 2016–2022 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-06-29
Deniz Ortactepe Hart, Julie AydınlıThis systematic review of 170+ journal articles showcases the current trends and developments in Turkey-based applied linguistics and language education research between 2016–2022. The current review presents similarities to the previous reviews (Alptekin & Tatar, 2011; Aydınlı & Ortaçtepe, 2018) in terms of trends and practices that indicate a vibrant research scene and a community of practice in
-
Researching language-focused study abroad through an equity lens: A research agenda Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-06-08
Hyun-Sook Kang, Rachel L. ShivelyStudy abroad (SA) has long been regarded as a key component of internationalization efforts in higher education and much scholarship has investigated the practices and outcomes of SA from varied perspectives. More recently, scholars have paid growing attention to ways to increase the participation of historically marginalized students in SA, to design SA programs to meet those students’ needs, and
-
Ronald P. Leow's essential bookshelf: The L2 learning process in instructed second language acquisition (ISLA) Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-06-08
Ronald P. LeowRonald P. Leow is Professor (Applied Linguistics) in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese and Language Program Director of Spanish Language Instruction at Georgetown University. He has initiated and published (over 100 articles and chapters) in several strands of research that include language curriculum development, research methodology, cognitive processes and depth of processing in language
-
Transformative pedagogy for inclusion and social justice through translanguaging, co-learning, and transpositioning Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-05-16
Li WeiThe idea of translanguaging has disrupted much of the thinking in bilingual education. A common misunderstanding, however, is that translanguaging was intended to be a language teaching strategy. This article seeks to explore what a translanguaging approach to language teaching entails, with specific reference to the education of minoritized and racialized bilingual and multilingual learners in the
-
Multimodal composing and second language acquisition Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-05-05
Jungmin Lim, Matt KesslerMultimodal composing, which has sometimes been referred to synonymously as multimodal composition or multimodal writing, is the use of different semiotic resources (e.g., audio, visual, gestural, and/or spatial resources) in addition to linguistic text for making meaning. Notably, multimodal composing is neither a new type of writing nor a new area of research, with studies dating back to the early
-
Studies on pre-primary learners of foreign languages, their teachers, and parents: A critical overview of publications between 2000 and 2022 Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-05-02
Marianne Nikolov, Jelena Mihaljević DjigunovićThis article offers insights into trends found in 74 empirical studies on teaching and learning a foreign language (FL) in pre-primary schools in 25 countries. The emerging picture is like that of primary-school programs: most are implemented in English, mostly owing to parents’ enthusiasm rather than evidence on long term FL benefits. Researchers focus on measurable outcomes in the FL rather than
-
Tangible insights on the strategizing of language learners and users Lang. Teach. (IF 4.0) Pub Date : 2023-04-20
Andrew D. Cohen, Peter Yongqi Gu, Martha Nyikos, Luke Plonsky, Vee Harris, Pamela Gunning, Isobel Kai-Hui Wang, Mirosław Pawlak, Zoe Gavriilidou, Lydia Mitits, Julie M. Sykes, Xuesong (Andy) GaoThis article presents reflections from 12 experts on language learners strategy (LLS) research. They were asked to offer their reflections in one of their domains of expertise, linking research into LLS with successful language learning and use practices. In essence, they were called upon to provide a review of recent scholarship by identifying areas where results of research had already led to the