ABSTRACT

This book provides a comprehensive critical account of tandem learning, charting it evolution from its origins in European educational settings to modern programs offering new perspectives on the approach’s role within higher education. Taking stock of the ways in which increased globalization has produced new linguistic and sociocultural realities, the volume begins by looking back at the development of tandem learning over the last several decades, growing out of a need to create more opportunities for L2 learners to communicate in their target language. The book then examines the different learning objectives and learning outcomes of tandem learning arrangements, moving toward a discussion of tandem learning’s potential role in shaping language policy and the unique challenges involved in implementing tandem programs at higher education institutions. The final section of the book brings the previous discussions together to consider new tools and technology and the ways in which they can better equip language educators to implement tandem learning in their own practice. Highlighting tandem learning’s potential to promote multilingual and multicultural learning on a global scale, this volume will be of particular interest to students and researchers in intercultural communication, language education, multilingualism, and applied linguistics.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|82 pages

Remodelling Tandem Learning and Language Policies

chapter 1|16 pages

Reciprocity 2.0

How Reciprocity Is Mediated Through Different Formats of Learners’ Logs

chapter 2|16 pages

From a Cultural to an Intercultural Approach

Tandem Learning and the Intercultural Speaker

chapter 4|19 pages

Reconsidering Tandem Learning Through a Translanguaging Lens

A Study of Students’ Perceptions and Practices

part II|82 pages

Tandem and (Language and Culture) Learning

chapter 6|17 pages

Tracing the Development of Intercultural Competence in Telecollaborative Interaction

An Analysis of Evaluative Language in eTandem Exchanges

chapter 8|18 pages

Will My Fluency Improve in the Tandem Programme?

An Analysis of Japanese and French Language Production

part III|104 pages

Running Tandem Programmes

chapter 11|15 pages

Possible Ways of Fostering Self-Evaluation in Tandem

A Project Supported by the Franco-German Youth Office

chapter 12|14 pages

Assessment in Higher Education Tandem

A Proposal

chapter 14|14 pages

Designing and Using a Tandem Learning Textbook

A Case Study—Romania and Slovakia

chapter 16|17 pages

Language Policies and Multilingualism

A European Perspective

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

Redefining Tandem Language and Culture Learning in Higher Education