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1
Alles in Ordnung? Reflections on German order
Cramer, Rahel. - : Language on the move, 2016
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2
Would you mind if your child wanted to become an interpreter?
Cho, Jinhyun. - : Language on the move, 2016
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3
Portrait of a linguistic shirker
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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4
What makes foreigners weird? A quick guide to orientalism
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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5
Stereotyped ethnic names as a barrier to workplace entry
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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6
Child language brokering
Grey, Alexandra. - : Language on the move, 2016
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7
Language and migration
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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8
Giving children the gift of bilingualism
Gerber, Livia. - : Language on the move, 2016
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9
How to solve Australia’s language learning crisis
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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10
Herder : an explainer for linguists
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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11
The Language that cannot speak its name
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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12
Have we just seen the beginning of the end of English?
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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13
The Real problem with linguistic shirkers
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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14
Urban sociolinguistics in Dubai
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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15
Why does English spread in global academia?
Cho, Jinhyun. - : Language on the move, 2016
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16
Building bridges in a divided world
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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17
Can ESL teachers play a role in helping maintain the home language?
Bodis, Agnes. - : Language on the move, 2016
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18
Do monolingual teachers produce a Golem effect in multilingual students?
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
Abstract: Teacher expectations produce self-fulfilling prophecies in student performance: high teacher expectations result in students’ higher academic performance and low teacher expectations result in students’ lower academic performance. The positive effect of teacher expectations on student performance is called “Pygmalion Effect” and the negative effect is called “Golem effect.” Evidence for a Golem effect in teaching was first provided in a 1982 Israeli study. The researchers Elisha Babad, Jacinto Inbar and Robert Rosenthal provided evidence for the Golem effect “with low-expectancy students of high-bias teachers receiving a more negative treatment and performing less well than any of their peers” (p. 473).
Keyword: 200401 applied linguistics and educational linguistics; 200405 language in culture and society (sociolinguistics)
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/1073232
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19
Why a multilingual social imagination matters
Piller, Ingrid. - : Language on the move, 2016
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20
Crucial communication : language management in Australian asylum interviews
Smith-Khan, Laura. - : Language on the move, 2016
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