Advanced Language Learning


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Advanced Language Learning


Advanced Language Learning

Author: Heidi Byrnes

language: en

Publisher: A&C Black

Release Date: 2009-02-08


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Examines the need for advanced levels of language learning from socio-cultural and linguistic perspectives.

Second Language Acquisition


Second Language Acquisition

Author: Kees De Bot

language: en

Publisher: Psychology Press

Release Date: 2005


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Second Language Acquisition: introduces the key areas in the field, including multilingualism, the role of teaching, the mental processing of multiple languages, and patterns of growth and decline explores the key theories and debates and elucidates areas of controversy gathers together influential readings from key names in the discipline, including: Vivian Cook, William E. Dunn and James P. Lantolf, S.P. Corder, and Nina Spada and Patsy Lightbown.

Foreign Language Anxiety and the Advanced Language Learner


Foreign Language Anxiety and the Advanced Language Learner

Author: Zsuzsa Tóth

language: en

Publisher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing

Release Date: 2010-08-11


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Does anxiety about learning and using a foreign language decline as learners become more competent in the target language, or is anxiety also relevant at higher levels of proficiency? This is the question Foreign Language Anxiety and the Advanced Language Learner sets out to explore. The aim of the book is to give readers an insight into what role anxiety plays in the language learning and communication processes of advanced language learners. Specifically, the study examines how advanced EFL learners’ foreign language anxiety (FLA) can be characterized; how anxiety relates to other individual differences (cognitive, affective, personality); and explores the relationship between FLA and various aspects of learners’ performance and communication experience in the target language. The research context is Hungary. The findings, however, are not confined to the Hungarian EFL setting. In addition to making a contribution to the clarification of some unresolved issues in language anxiety research—including the role of proficiency in the development of anxiety, the relationship between anxiety and other learner variables, and the much-debated question of whether or not anxiety accounts for differential success in L2 learning—this study has important implications for language teachers as well.