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This volume contributes to the research in two different research areas: lexical availability studies and vocabulary research in second or foreign languages. Lexical availability is defined as the words that immediately come to mind as a response to a stimulus provided by topics related to domains closely connected to daily life: for instance animals, food and drink, daily activities, politics, or poverty. Lexical availability is a dimension of learners’ receptive and productive lexical competence, and, consequently, an important variable of learners’ communicative competence. Written by leading researchers in Spanish and English applied linguistics, the studies presented in this volume offer the reader findings and insights from studies conducted in learners with different mother tongues, who learn English or Spanish as their second or third language. “This book made me aware of an approach to vocabulary acquisition which has a long tradition in European research, but has been somewhat neglected by English-speaking researchers. The methodology was pioneered in France where it developed into the Francais Fondamental project - an influential approach to the vocabulary needs of learners of French. It was also taken up by Spanish researchers, and more recently developed by the team at La Rioja University. Where English-language research has focused on the frequency of words in large corpora and the implications of this feature for L2 vocabulary acquisition, the lexical availability tradition takes a much more learner-centred approach to L2 vocabulary skills, directly reflecting learners' needs and learners' ability to do things with small, effective vocabularies. This leads to a set of research priorities that look refreshingly different from the ones we are used to. Read this book. It might change the way you think about vocabulary research.” Paul Meara, Swansea University, Wales, UK.
English language --- Spanish language --- Lexicography. --- Dictionaries --- History and criticism --- Education. --- Applied linguistics. --- Psycholinguistics. --- Language and education. --- Literacy. --- Language Education. --- Applied Linguistics. --- Illiteracy --- Education --- General education --- Educational linguistics --- Language and languages --- Language, Psychology of --- Psychology of language --- Speech --- Linguistics --- Psychology --- Thought and thinking --- Children --- Education, Primitive --- Education of children --- Human resource development --- Instruction --- Pedagogy --- Schooling --- Students --- Youth --- Civilization --- Learning and scholarship --- Mental discipline --- Schools --- Teaching --- Training --- Psychological aspects --- Language and languages. --- Foreign languages --- Languages --- Anthropology --- Communication --- Ethnology --- Information theory --- Meaning (Psychology) --- Philology
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This volume contributes to the research in two different research areas: lexical availability studies and vocabulary research in second or foreign languages. Lexical availability is defined as the words that immediately come to mind as a response to a stimulus provided by topics related to domains closely connected to daily life: for instance animals, food and drink, daily activities, politics, or poverty. Lexical availability is a dimension of learners’ receptive and productive lexical competence, and, consequently, an important variable of learners’ communicative competence. Written by leading researchers in Spanish and English applied linguistics, the studies presented in this volume offer the reader findings and insights from studies conducted in learners with different mother tongues, who learn English or Spanish as their second or third language. “This book made me aware of an approach to vocabulary acquisition which has a long tradition in European research, but has been somewhat neglected by English-speaking researchers. The methodology was pioneered in France where it developed into the Francais Fondamental project - an influential approach to the vocabulary needs of learners of French. It was also taken up by Spanish researchers, and more recently developed by the team at La Rioja University. Where English-language research has focused on the frequency of words in large corpora and the implications of this feature for L2 vocabulary acquisition, the lexical availability tradition takes a much more learner-centred approach to L2 vocabulary skills, directly reflecting learners' needs and learners' ability to do things with small, effective vocabularies. This leads to a set of research priorities that look refreshingly different from the ones we are used to. Read this book. It might change the way you think about vocabulary research.” Paul Meara, Swansea University, Wales, UK.
Teaching --- Didactics of languages --- Adult education. Lifelong learning --- Psycholinguistics --- Linguistics --- geletterdheid --- onderwijs --- talenonderwijs --- armoede --- linguïstiek --- alfabetisering --- analfabetisme --- psycholinguïstiek --- tweede taal
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Gender identity. --- Language and languages --- Sex role. --- Sex differences.
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Dit boek speelt in op de groeiende interesse voor CLIL, een methode van tweede/vreemdetaal leren dat het gebruik van de doeltaal vereist om inhoud te leren. CLIL wordt meer en meer gebruikt in verschillende taal-leer contexten. Dit boek verzamelt verschillende studieresultaten over het effect van CLIL. De veronderstelling is dat leerders beter een taal leren als ze de taal gebruiken om een bepaalde inhoud te leren, dan wanneer ze de taal op een meer academische manier aangebracht krijgen.
Didactics of Dutch --- Primary education --- Secondary education
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This book contributes to the growth of interest in Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL), an approach to second/foreign language learning that requires the use of the target language to learn content. Within the framework of European strategies to promote multilingualism, CLIL has begun to be used extensively in a variety of language learning contexts, and at different educational systems and language programmes. This book brings together critical analyses on theoretical and implementation issues of Content and Language Integrated Learning, and empirical studies on the effectiveness of this type of instruction on learners’ language competence. The basic theoretical assumption behind this book is that through successful use of the language to learn content, learners will develop their language proficiency more effectively while they learn the academic content specified in the curricula.
Language and languages --- Language arts --- Study and teaching --- Correlation with content subjects --- Schoolbooks - Didactic material --- Communication arts --- Communication --- Language and languages - Study and teaching - Europe --- Language arts - Correlation with content subjects - Europe --- CLIL. --- Content and Language Integrated Learning. --- SLA. --- empirical studies on CLIL. --- empirical studies on SLA. --- foreign language learning. --- multilingualism. --- research on CLIL. --- second language learning.
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