ABSTRACT

Volume III of the Handbook of Research in Second Language Teaching and Learning, like Volumes I and II, is a comprehensive, state-of-the-art overview of current research into social contexts of second language (L2)/foreign language (FL) teaching and learning; language policy; curriculum; types of instruction; incremental language skills such as listening, speaking, reading, writing, vocabulary, and grammar; international communication; pragmatics; assessment and testing. It differs from earlier volumes in its main purpose—to provide a more in-depth discussion and detailed focus on the development of the essential language skills required for any type of communication: speaking, listening, reading, vocabulary, grammar, and writing.

Volume III preserves continuity with previous volumes in its coverage of all the classical areas of research in L2/FL teaching and learning and applied linguistics, but rather than offering a historical review of disciplinary traditions, it explores innovations and new directions of research, acknowledges the enormous complexity of teaching and learning the essential language abilities, and offers a diversity of perspectives. Chapter authors are all leading authorities in their disciplinary areas.

What’s new in Volume III?

  • Updates the prominent areas of research, including the sub-disciplines addressed in Volumes I and II, and represents the disciplinary mainstays
  • Considers and discusses perspectives held by different schools of thought on the what, the how, and the why of teaching foundational language skills, including theories, pedagogical principles, and their implementation in practice
  • Captures new and ongoing developments and trends in the key areas of L2/FL teaching and learning, and innovative research topics that have gained substantial recognition in current publications, including the role of corpora, technology, and digital literacy in L2/FL teaching and learning
  • Examines new trends in language pedagogy and research, such as an increased societal emphasis on teaching academic language for schooling, somewhat contradictory definitions of literacy, and the growing needs for instruction in intercultural communication.

part I|100 pages

Social Contexts, Language Policy, and Language Learners

part III|71 pages

Listening and Speaking

chapter 15|13 pages

L2 Listening

chapter 17|13 pages

Learning-to-Speak and Speaking-to-Learn

Five Categories of Learning Opportunity

chapter 19|13 pages

Pronunciation

part IV|69 pages

Literacies, Reading, and Writing

chapter 20|13 pages

Second Language Literacy

Kindergarten to Grade 12

chapter 21|13 pages

Digital Literacies

chapter 23|16 pages

Reading and Technology

What’s New and What’s Old about Reading in Hyperlinked Multimedia Environments?

chapter 24|12 pages

Research on L2 Writing

Contexts, Writers, and Pedagogy

part V|56 pages

Vocabulary and Grammar

chapter 25|12 pages

The Three “I”s of Second Language Vocabulary Learning

Input, Instruction, Involvement

chapter 26|14 pages

Measuring Vocabulary Size

chapter 27|15 pages

Prioritizing Grammar to Teach or Not to Teach

A Research Perspective

part VI|56 pages

International Communication and Pragmatics

part VII|53 pages

Assessment and Testing