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This book examines how Russian-speaking adoptees in three US families actively shape opportunities for language learning and identity construction in everyday interactions. This work focuses on how learners achieve agency in second language socialization processes and informs the fields of second language acquisition and language maintenance and shift.
Past studies of family language socialization often focus on children’s verbal communication skills and are conducted from the parents’ perspective. This book describes a child’s mostly self-directed and near-simultaneous multilingual and multiliterate development from birth to age 8. The present findings thus emphasize the critical role of child agency, and they may redefine and expand on the traditional theoretical framework of family language policy.
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)].
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
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
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)
This new volume of work highlights the distinctiveness of child SLA through a collection of different types of empirical research specific to younger learners. Characteristics of children’s cognitive, emotional, and social development distinguish their experiences from those of adult L2 learners, creating intriguing issues for SLA research, and also raising important practical questions regarding effective pedagogical techniques for learners of different ages. While child SLA is often typically thought of as simple (and often enjoyable and universally effortless), in other words, as “child’s play”, the complex portraits of young second language learners which emerge in the 16 papers collected in this book invite the reader to reconsider the reality for many younger learners. Chapters by internationally renowned authors together with reports by emerging researchers describe second and foreign language learning by children ranging from pre-schoolers to young adolescents, in home and school contexts, with caregivers, peers, and teachers as interlocutors.
Addressing a wide range of issues in applied linguistics, sociolinguistics, and multilingualism, this volume focuses on language users, the ‘people.’ Making creative connections between existing scholarship in language policy and contemporary theory and research in other social sciences, authors from around the world offer new critical perspectives for analyzing language phenomena and language theories, suggesting new meeting points among language users and language policy makers, norms, and traditions in diverse cultural, geographical, and historical contexts. Identifying and expanding on previously neglected aspects of language studies, the book is inspired by the work of Elana Shohamy, whose critical view and innovative work on a broad spectrum of key topics in applied linguistics has influenced many scholars in the field to think “out of the box” and to reconsider some basic commonly held understandings, specifically with regard to the impact of language and languaging on individual language users rather than on the masses.