ABSTRACT

Written from the practical viewpoint of language educators, these essays address classroom applications of second-language theory that respond to a broad spectrum of needs of foreign-language instructors. In addition to the commonly taught French and Spanish, it offers commentary on the teaching of Arabic, Greek, Hungarian, and Japanese. Topics include grammar; task variation and repair; the transition from language to literature and writing; the use of technology; and methodology. There is a glossary of pedagogical terms and an index.

part |1 pages

The Foreign Language Classroom

chapter |20 pages

Responding to Foreign-Language Student Writing

Expanding Our Options

chapter |13 pages

Arabic as a Foreign Language

Bringing Diglossia into the Classroom

chapter |15 pages

Acquisition of Pragmatic Rules

The Gap between What the Language Textbooks Present and How Learners Perform 1

part |1 pages

Epilogue: Directions for Future Research in Foreign Languages