Menu Expand
Investigating Tasks in Formal Language Learning

Investigating Tasks in Formal Language Learning

Dr. María del Pilar García Mayo

(2006)

Additional Information

Book Details

Abstract

This book contributes to the growth of interest in task-based language learning and teaching that has been seen in recent years. It brings together research that focuses on various aspects and effects of pedagogic task design and presents work that uses tasks to examine oral interaction, written production, vocabulary and reading, lexical innovation and pragmatics in different formal language learning contexts and in different languages (English as a second/foreign language, French/German/Italian/Spanish as foreign languages). It also provides guidelines for task classification, sequencing and design.

The book is addressed to both professionals and students interested in second language acquisition research. It will also be of use to professionals involved in language pedagogy and curriculum design.


Written for researchers, practitioners, and students of SLA and task-based language learning and teaching, this book provides a wide-ranging collection of research on second language (L2) tasks in formal language instruction, covering both cognitive and sociocultural perspectives, both oral and written modalities, various target languages and features, and learners of different first languages (L1s) and proficiency levels. Notable is the inclusive scope of areas dealt with in the book, including oral interaction, writing, reading comprehension, vocabulary development, learning strategies, pragmatics, and computer-mediated communication. This book provides an excellent up-to-date anthology of L2 task research. It makes successful contribution to the enhancement of our understanding of various aspects of task-based research and is certainly a welcome and important addition to the field.


Bo-Ram Suh Georgetown University

The book provides a much needed examination of options in classifying and sequencing language learning tasks. Framed by Robinson's insightful overview of competing theoretical claims in the area, eleven new data-based studies elucidate relationships between pedogic task types and accuracy, complexity and fluency in L2 speech and writing, and between task types and acquisition. Garcia-Mayo's book advances the international research agenda on task-based language teaching.


Mike Long, University of Maryland

Various aspects of tasks, task features, and task complexity are of key interest to today’s second language acquisition researchers, who seek to understand the intricacies of how task-based interaction plays a facilitative role in instructed language development, and how research on tasks can inform task-based syllabus design. This new edited collection provides a rich compendium of work on second language tasks that will be invaluable for researchers and students of task-based language learning alike. The book also provides research-based evidence for second language teachers and educators who want to learn about best practices in task-based formal language instruction. Taken as whole, the text provides a broad and balanced overview of the current state of the art in instructed task research, with an impressive range of chapters from leading researchers in the field. The book deals with an interesting variety of target and source languages, modes, contexts and settings, and a range of aspects of task features from multiple complementary perspectives. It makes an important and timely contribution to the field and will be read with interest and profit by any serious task scholar.


Alison Mackey, Georgetown University

María del Pilar García Mayo received her M.A. and Ph.D. in Linguistics from the University of Iowa (U.S.A). She is Full Professor of English Language and Linguistics at the University of the Basque Country (Spain). Her research interests are second language acquisition (in particular the acquisition of syntactic aspects of English as a second/foreign language from a generative perspective and input and interaction in formal language learning contexts) and second language research methodology. Her recent publications have focused on the acquisition of syntactic aspects of English as a third language and on issues related to interaction and focus on form in the foreign language classroom.


Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Contents v
Foreword vii
Contributors xi
Introduction 1
Chapter 1 Criteria for Classifying and Sequencing Pedagogic Tasks 7
Chapter 2 Information Distribution and Goal Orientation in Second Language Task Design 27
Chapter 3 The Simultaneous Manipulation of Task Complexity Along Planning Time and [+/– Here-and-Now]: Effects on L2 Oral Production 44
Chapter 4 Tasks, Negotiation, and L2 Learning in a Foreign Language Context 69
Chapter 5 Attention to Form Across Collaborative Tasks by Low-Proficiency Learners in an EFL Setting 91
Chapter 6 Cognitive Task Complexity and Linguistic Performance in French L2 Writing 117
Chapter 7 The Effect of Manipulating Task Complexity Along the [+/– Here-and-Now] Dimension on L2 Written Narrative Discourse 136
Chapter 8 Writing Tasks: The Effects of Collaboration 157
Chapter 9 L2 Vocabulary Acquisition and Reading Comprehension: The Influence of Task Complexity 178
Chapter 10 Task-Effect on the Use of Lexical Innovation Strategies in Interlanguage Communication 199
Chapter 11 Fostering EFL Learners' Awareness of Requesting Through Explicit and Implicit Consciousness-Raising Tasks 221
Chapter 12 Interactive Task Design: Metachat and the Whole Learner 242
Index 265