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Papers in this issue:(1) Jesús García Laborda & Miguel Fernández Álvarez: Teachers' opinions towards the integration of oral tasks in the Spanish University Examination; (2)Oksana Laleko:Restructuring of verbal aspect in Heritage Russian: Beyond lexicalization; (3) Yu-Cheng Lee:Comparison of politeness and acceptability perceptions of request strategies between Chinese learners of English and native English speakers; (4) Kunal Kamal Kumar: Development and application of an instrument to find out the linguistic background of employees in MNCs; (5) Amelia Maria Cava: Abstracting science: A corpus-based approach to research article abstracts; (6) Reima Al-Jarf: Helping medical students with online videos; (7) Mohammad Ali Salmani Nodoushan & Nafiseh Khakbaz: Theses 'Discussion' sections: A structural move analysis; (8) Hossein Karami & Mohammad Ali Salmani Nodoushan: Differential Item Functioning (DIF): Current problems and future directions; (9) Forough Rahimi: Book Review
This volume offers a comprehensive, empirical and methodological view over new scenarios recently emerged in language teaching and learning, such as blended learning, e-learning, ubiquitous, social, autonomous or lifelong learning, and also over some new (ICT-based) approaches that can support them (CALL, MALL, CLIL, LMOOCs).
Papers in this issue: (1) Gregory L. Thompson: Coding-switching as style-shifting; (2) Manvender Kaur & Sarimah Shamsudin: Extracting noun forms: A lesson learnt; (3) Mohammad Ali Salmani Nodoushan: Temperament as an indicator of language achievement; (4) Negmeldin Alsheikh & Hala Elhoweris: United Arab Emirates (UAE) high school students' motivation to read in English as a foreign language; (5) Farhat Jabeen, M. Asim Rai & Sara Arif: A corpus based study of discourse markers in British and Pakistani speech; (6) Diego Gabriel Krivochen: The Quantum Human Computer Hypothesis and Radical Minimalism: A brief introduction to Quantum Linguistics; (7) Abbas Ali Rezaee & Elham Kermani: Essay raters' personality types and rater reliability; (8) Kristen L. Pratt: Book Review: Jørgensen, J. N., (Ed.). (2010). Love Ya Hate Ya: The Sociolinguistic Study of Youth Language and Youth Identities. Newcastle, UK: Cambridge Scholars. [286pp; ISBN 1-4438-2061-X (hardcover)].
Papers in this issue by: Mohammad Ali Salmani Nodoushan (pp. 1-17); Diana Fauzia Sari & Yunisrina Qismullah Yusuf (pp. 18-36); P. Lindhout, G.J. Teunissen & M.P. Lindhout (pp. 37-56); Jiemin Bu (pp. 57-80); Noparat Tananuraksakul (pp. 81-98); Yasunari Fujii (pp. 99-126); and Azizeh Chalak (pp. 127-136)
Eman Safadi & Ghaleb Rababah (1 - 38); Johanna Ennser-Kananen (39 - 66); Sedat Maden (67 - 86); Jiin-Yih Yeo & Su-Hie Ting (87 - 106); Yesim Papers in this issue by Bektas-Cetinkaya (107 - 122); Mohammad Ali Salmani Nodoushan (123 - 136); Kellie Rolstad, Jeff MacSwan & Kate S. Mahoney (137 - 150); Forough Rahimi (151 - 154); Servet Celik & Mustafa Kerem Kobul (155 - 157)
Papers in this issue: Mohammad Ali Salmani Nodoushan & Hamed Montazeran, The book review genre: A structural move analysis; Jessica L. Reid, Questioning a world standard English; Huda Al-Mansoob, Socio-cultural and religious boundaries: Can teaching cognitive stylistics be fully implemented in Arab/Muslim universities?; Mohammed Ayodeji Ademilokun, Nigerian undergraduate football fans' discourse: Visuals as Communication tools; Ricard Viñas-de-Puig, Mayangna Yulbarangyang Balna & Elena Benedicto, Linguistic and technical training as a community empowerment tool: The case of the Mayangna linguists' team in Nicaragua; Derya Fazila Agis, Gender and politeness: Politeness strategies in the popular Turkish series "Avrupa Yakası" ("European Side"); Yuliana Natsir, Language encounters in the workplace of Banci community; Reza Mobashshernia, Book Review; Forough Rahimi, Book Review
This book provides an in-depth look on Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) and Early Childhood Education (ECE), two domains where major joint research is needed. By taking stock on theoretical underpinnings, it explores the ideal conditions for early additional language acquisition in preschool contexts through CLIL with a learner-centered approach grounded in developmentally appropriate practices (DEP) and an emphasis on the importance of play, cognition, holistic content adaptation and social-emotional learning. The book also offers a comprehensive view of how this methodological approach has already set a clear path on Pre-primary education internationally. Finally, it offers insights into CLIL pedagogies as related and adapted to Pre-primary education, resources and materials for very young learners and practical implementation from the classroom. By providing a solid empirical background on Pre-primary CLIL, along with appropriate methodological issues and practices, this book serves as a key resource to students, practitioners, academics as well as teacher educators and policy-makers in international contexts.
Teaching World Languages for Specific Purposes provides learner-centered strategies, models, and resources for the development of WLSP curricula, inviting scholars, educators, and professionals of all areas of world language specialization to create new opportunities for their students.
Papers in this issue by: Louise CUMMINGS (1-30); Theresa CATALANO & Linda R. WAUGH (31-60); Zhi LI (61-82);Wen Hsien YANG (83-108); D. Catalina MÉNDEZ VALLEJO (109-142); Fereshteh AHANGARI & Nafiseh MORADI (143-153); Şakire ERBAY (154-156)