ELTWeekly Vol. 4 Issue 26

ELTWeekly Vol. 4 Issue#26 | June 25, 2012 | ISSN 0975-3036 Video: Seven Ways of Looking at Grammar  . Book of the week: The Heinemann ELT Wordbuilder  . Video: Empowering the Language Learner  , Research Paper: ‘When to Start Second Language Teaching or Learning in an EFL Context?’ by Saeid Najafi Sarem & Hadi Hamidi  .… Continue reading ELTWeekly Vol. 4 Issue 26

Vol. 4 Issue 26 – Book of the week: The Heinemann ELT Wordbuilder

The Heinemann ELT Wordbuilder provides vocabulary development and practice for higher-level students. It includes 60 units of vocabulary in context, presented through a wide variety of games, reading texts, dialogues and diagrams.

Vol. 4 Issue 26 – Research Paper: ‘When to Start Second Language Teaching or Learning in an EFL Context?’ by Saeid Najafi Sarem & Hadi Hamidi

Among the many factors that affect second language learning and teaching practices, age has been always considered an important factor. The beginning age for learning a foreign language is a controversial issue concerning which various ideas have been proposed by different scholars. Some researchers refer to the concept of critical period hypothesis for L1 acquisition and claim that before puberty is the best time to start teaching a second language. On the other hand, some other researchers reject the application of this hypothesis in second language learning relying on the evidence that adult learners can acquire a second language more easily at least in some aspects of language. In their claims, these researchers refer to the concepts like multiple critical period and the presence of motivation based on which any person can begin learning a second language at any age. The findings of the current paper are of important implications for the field of foreign/second language teaching.

Vol. 4 Issue 26 – Video: Empowering the Language Learner

Using a combination of lecture and experiential exercises, ESL education specialist Diane Larsen-Freeman traces the evolution of language teaching methods over the past 60 years, discussing how each evolutionary phase has contributed to a more “whole-person” view of language learners.

Vol. 4 Issue 26 – Video: Seven Ways of Looking at Grammar

What is grammar, and how is it internalized in the mind? Is it made up of symbolic code or of neural connections? Is it a sedimented trace left by previous conversations or an innate human capacity? Our answers to these questions obviously shape the way we go about teaching second languages.