DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Hits 1 – 18 of 18

1
From Disrupted Classrooms to Human-Machine Collaboration? The Pocket Calculator, Google Translate, and the Future of Language Education
In: L2 Journal, vol 14, iss 1 (2022)
BASE
Show details
2
It takes a village: Digitizing domestic summer programs to confront COVID-19
Urlaub, Per. - : University of Hawaii National Foreign Language Resource Center, 2020. : (co-sponsored by American Association of University of Supervisors and Coordinators; Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition; Center for Educational Reources in Culture, Language, and Literacy; Center for Open Educational Resources and Language Learning; Open Language Resource Center; Second Language Teaching and Resource Center), 2020
BASE
Show details
3
Does German Cultural Studies need the Nation-State Model?
Almog, Yael; Belgum, Kirsten; Biebuyck, Benjamin. - : Wiley Periodicals, Inc., 2019. : Palgrave Macmillan, 2019
BASE
Show details
4
Reading the German graphic novel : understanding learners’ readings of multimodal literary comics
BASE
Show details
5
Beliefs about grammar instruction among post-secondary second-language learners and teachers
BASE
Show details
6
Culture specific aspects of semantic frames in multilingual frame descriptions
VanNoy, Annika. - 2017
BASE
Show details
7
Exploring change : oral metadiscourse of advanced learners of Russian in extended study abroad
BASE
Show details
8
A usage-based approach to verb classes in English and German
BASE
Show details
9
Dramatizing/digitizing literacy: Theater education and digital scholarship in the applied linguistics curriculum
Urlaub, Per. - : Heinle Cengage Learning, 2015
BASE
Show details
10
Semantic role alignment in metaphor : a frame semantic approach to metaphoric meaning
BASE
Show details
11
I thought we weren't in Spain : the emergence of authenticity in a foreign language classroom
Abstract: text ; This study is based upon the idea that foreign language (FL) classrooms exist apart from their target language communities. While historically, this has been a geographic truth, divides between FL learners and native speakers may also reflect symbolic social distance. Given the symbolic, if not geographic, isolation of the FL classroom from the real world, this study presumes that a challenge inherent to the endeavor of FL education is that the authentic, real-world language and culture under study are, by definition, not naturally present in the FL classroom. This study considers how this challenge, referred to as the challenge of authenticity, is managed in one FL classroom. Seven eighth-grade students and their teacher comprise Classroom 204, a beginning Spanish FL classroom at a private school in the southwest U.S. This qualitative case study uses classroom observations, audio-recordings, classroom artifacts, and participant interviews as data to consider not only how authenticity is imported, imagined, and conjured by participants in Classroom 204, but how authenticity is assigned value therein. Data is analyzed largely with discourse analysis of transcripts of classroom talk about (and classroom talk that constituted) various facets of authenticity, value, and the real world. Ecology theory serves as a broad theoretical lens through which to understand (and accept) the complexity inherent to the social phenomena being researched. Benedict Anderson's (1991) theory of imagined communities is adopted to understand the boundaries that delineate the inside of the FL classroom from the outside, and Bourdieu's (1992) notion of symbolic capital is used to understand the ways by which authenticity becomes valuable (and, conversely, how that which is valuable becomes authentic). Findings suggest that, while participants are largely oriented to real-world manifestations of Spanish language and culture, authenticity is not most present in Classroom 204 in the form of stuff imported from elsewhere. Rather, authenticity emerges out of the highly local, socially-immediate interactions and value systems unique to Classroom 204. Suggestions for both pedagogy and future research focus on approaches that acknowledge and capitalize on the power of local authenticity in the FL classroom, as cultivated by local social actors. ; Curriculum and Instruction
Keyword: Authenticity; Cultural appropriation; Discourse analysis; Ecology theory; Foreign language education; Imagined communities; Spanish; Symbolic capital
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2152/30498
BASE
Hide details
12
Questioning the Text: Advancing Literary Reading in the Second Language Through Web‐Based Strategy Training
In: Foreign language annals. - New York, NY 46 (2013) 3, 508-521
OLC Linguistik
Show details
13
Critical Literacy and Intercultural Awareness through the Reading Comprehension Strategy of Questioning in Business Language Education
In: Global Business Languages (2013)
BASE
Show details
14
Reading strategies and literature instruction: Teaching learners to generate questions to foster literary reading in the second language
In: System. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 40 (2012) 2, 296-304
OLC Linguistik
Show details
15
Intercultural communicative competence : assessing outcomes of an undergraduate German language program
BASE
Show details
16
Twist in the list : frame semantics as vocabulary teaching and learning tool
BASE
Show details
17
Understanding comprehension: Hermeneutics, literature, and culture in collegiate foreign language education
Urlaub, Per. - : Heinle Cengage Learning, 2010
BASE
Show details
18
Humor and parodies in the foreign language classroom
BASE
Show details

Catalogues
0
0
2
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
16
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern