<p>This book is about Positioning Theory (Davies & HarrΓ©, 1990) and its potential applications in bilingual and multilingual contexts involving teachers, learners, speakers, and users of a second/foreign or additional language. By using Positioning Theory as a theoretical lens and analytical approac
Doing replication research in applied linguistics
β Scribed by Graeme Keith Porte
- Year
- 2019
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 191
- Series
- Second language acquisition research series
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Series page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Figures
Tables
Acknowledgement
Chapter 1: Introduction: Why Replication Research Matters
1.1 Where Does Replication Fit in to the Research Cycle?
1.2 The Changing Status of Replication Research
Notes
Chapter 2: Finding a Study to Replicate: Background Research
2.1 Why Might We Need to Replicate a Study?
2.2 Focusing on a Suitable Target Study
Notes
Chapter 3: Planning Your Replication Research Project
3.1 Unpacking a Study Selected for Replication
3.2 Routes to Replication: Reading for Awareness-Raising
Notes
Chapter 4: What Kind of Replication Should You Do? From the Inside, Looking Out: Initial Critique and Internal Replication
4.1 Deciding on the Approach to Replication
4.2 Internal Replication: Cross-Validation, Jackknife, and Bootstrapping
Notes
Chapter 5: What Kind of Replication Should You Do? From the Outside, Looking In
5.1 External Replication
Sample Series of Close Replications
Participants: Status Series
Time: Data-Gathering Series
Task Condition Series
Notes
Chapter 6: Executing and Writing up Your Replication Study: Research Questions and Methodology
6.1 Introduction
6.2 A Close Replication of Bitchener and Knoch (2010)
6.3 Reviewing Research Design for Replication Feasibility
6.4 Research Questions
Notes
Chapter 7: Executing and Writing up Your Replication Study: Analysis, Results, Discussion, and Conclusion
7.1 Introduction
Notes
Chapter 8: Disseminating Your Research
8.1 Journals
8.2 Getting a Journal Interested in Your Replication Study
8.3 Collaboration in Replication Studies
8.4 Replication Research Ethics and βReplication Bullyingβ
8.5 Working in a Replication Team
8.6 Presenting Your Work at Conferences
Notes
Chapter 9: Epilogue
Note
Index
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