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E-raamat: Teachability and Learnability across Languages

Edited by (Østfold University College), Edited by (Østfold University College), Edited by (Ludwigsburg University of Education), Edited by (Østfold University College)
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Teachability and Learnability across Languages addresses key issues in second, foreign and heritage language acquisition, as well as in language teaching. Focusing on a Processability Theory perspective, it brings together empirical studies of language acquisition, language teaching, and language assessment. For the first time, a research timeline for the role of instruction in language learning is presented, showing how the field of second language acquisition (SLA) research has developed over the last four decades since Pienemann’s work on learnability and syllabus construction over the 1980s. The book includes studies of child and adult second as well as foreign language acquisition research, covering a wide range of target languages including English, German, Hungarian, Japanese, Norwegian, Polish, Spanish, Swedish, and Turkish. In addition, future extensions of PT are discussed. This volume is designed for advanced students in international programs of SLA and Applied Linguistics as well as for SLA researchers and second and foreign language teachers.
Introduction 1(8)
Ragnar Arntzen
Gisela Hakansson
Arnstein Hjelde
Jorg-U. Keßler
Part I Teachability and learnability
Chapter 1 Research timeline. The role of instruction: Teachability and processability
9(18)
Kristof Baten
Jorg-U. Keßler
Chapter 2 How much English do children know before they are exposed to instruction? Applying Processability Theory to receptive grammar
27(24)
Gisela Hakansson
Chapter 3 Morpho-syntactic development in the input: A study of second language learning textbooks
51(20)
Anna Flyman Mattsson
Chapter 4 Are speech and writing teachable? Re-examining developmental constraints on pedagogy
71(26)
Bronwen Dyson
Part II Methods and assessment
Chapter 5 The elicitation of oral language production data: An exploration of the Elicited Imitation Task
97(22)
Kristof Baten
Chapter 6 Elicited imitation as a diagnostic tool of morpho-syntactic processing
119(18)
Jacopo Saturno
Chapter 7 Grammatical accuracy and complexity in a speaking proficiency test
137(26)
Anders Agebjorn
Part III Cross-linguistic aspects of SLA
Chapter 8 Acquisition of nominal morphology in Norwegian L2: Trends and tendencies
163(20)
Linda Evenstad Emilsen
Chapter 9 Interlingual versus intralingual tendencies in second language acquisition: Expressing motion events in English, Hungarian and Japanese
183(22)
Miho Mano
Yuko Yoshinari
Kiyoko Eguchi
Chapter 10 The acquisition of Turkish (genitive-)possessive structures by adult Norwegian learners
205(32)
Ernel Turker-van der Heiden
Gozde Mercan
Closing chapter: Opening new perspectives
Chapter 11 Heritage language development and the promise of Processability Theory
237(24)
Silvina Montrul
Subject index 261