ABSTRACT

Providing a much-needed critical synthesis of research on teaching vocabulary and grammar to students of a second or foreign language, this book puts the research into perspective in order to distil recommendations for language teaching. Boers evaluates a comprehensive range of both well-established and lesser-known research strands and classroom practices to draw out the most effective instructional approaches to teaching words, multiword expressions and grammar patterns. Chapters discuss learning as a by-product of communicative activities, language-focused instruction, diverse types of exercises, mnemonic techniques and more, with a view to building bridges between the available research on such instructional approaches and how they are commonly implemented in actual language courses and textbooks.

This book helps teachers make research-informed decisions regarding their instructional approaches to words, phrases and patterns, and direct researchers to specific areas in need of further inquiry. Boers not only demonstrates how research findings can inform effective teaching, but also calls for a deeper appreciation on the part of researchers of the realities of the teaching profession, making this a worthwhile text for preservice teachers, teacher educators, graduate students and scholars.

part I|35 pages

Introduction

part II|52 pages

Improving The Chances of Incidental Acquisition

chapter 3|32 pages

Enhancing Textual Input

chapter 4|19 pages

From Input to Output (and Back Again)

part III|100 pages

Language-Focused Learning

part IV|26 pages

Conclusions and Future Directions

chapter 8|18 pages

Taking Stock

chapter 9|7 pages

Avenues