The rapidly growing interest in Chinese language teaching has not resultedin the development of a strong research framework for the discipline. Thebook addresses this gap by drawing together research from international scholars working in the field of Chinese as a second language research. The volum
Research in Chinese as a Second Language
β Scribed by Istvan Kecskes (editor)
- Publisher
- De Gruyter Mouton
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 294
- Series
- Trends in Applied Linguistics [TAL]; 9
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The book aims to address one of the main problems of Chinese language teaching: lack of research base. The rapidly growing interest in Chinese language teaching has not resulted in the development of a strong research background. This book attempts to change the current situation.
The volume consists of three chapters. Chapter I: Research Base for Practice contains three papers, each of which uses research findings as a basis for solving issues connected with practical language teaching. Chapter II: Integrating Culture and Language is about one of the most intriguing topics of current language-oriented research: how to integrate culture into the process of language teaching. Chapter III: Acquisition of Language Structures consists of studies that investigate the acquisition of certain grammatical structures in Chinese. There are only a few papers in the literature on this issue, so the articles in this chapter are especially important for further research.
One of the most important features of the volume is that each paper makes an attempt to bring together theory and practice by focusing on theory-building based on practice or theory application in practice. Thus the book can be recommended to both researchers and practitioners.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contributors to the volume
Introduction
Chapter 1: Research base for practice
Developing Chinese oral skills - A research base for practice
Asymmetric style of communication in Mandarin Chinese talk-in-interaction
Learning tones cooperatively in the CSL classroom: A proposal
Chapter 2: Integrating culture and language
Integrating culture and language in the Chinese as a foreign language classroom: A view from the bottom up
Analysis of pragmatic functions of Chinese cultural markers
Gestures as tone markers in multilingual communication
The collaborative construction of culture knowledge in a Chinese movie class
Chapter 3: Acquisition of language structures
The acquisition of Chinese modal auxiliary Neng Verb Group (NVG): A case study of an English L2 learner of Chinese
Acquisition of Chinese relative clauses at the initial stage
Conceptual similarities in languages - Evidence from English βbe going toβ and its Chinese counterparts
SLA of Mandarin nominal syntax: Emergence order in the early stages
Index
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