04386nam 2200853Ia 450 991081094820332120240410132408.01-78892-068-61-280-73945-297866107394551-85359-939-510.21832/9781853599392(CKB)1000000000337005(EBL)282687(OCoLC)476028583(SSID)ssj0000179664(PQKBManifestationID)12072919(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000179664(PQKBWorkID)10138357(PQKB)10026344(MiAaPQ)EBC282687(DE-B1597)513561(OCoLC)437175723(DE-B1597)9781853599392(Au-PeEL)EBL282687(CaPaEBR)ebr10156065(CaONFJC)MIL73945(EXLCZ)99100000000033700520060706d2007 uy 0engurnn#---|u||utxtccrInput for instructed L2 learners[electronic resource] the relevance of relevance /Anna Nizegorodcew1st ed.Clevedon, [England] ;Buffalo Multilingual Matters20071 online resource (194 p.)Second language acquisition ;22Description based upon print version of record.1-85359-937-9 1-85359-938-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front matter --Contents --Acknowledgements --Preface --Chapter 1. The Role of L2 Classroom Input in the Light of Second Language Acquisition Models and Relevance Theory --Chapter 2. L2 Teaching Perspective on the Role of Instructional Input --Chapter 3. L2 Classroom Discourse Perspective on the Role of Instructional Input --Chapter 4. Evidence from L2 Classroom Discourse Research Projects --Chapter 5. Classroom Discourse Data Interpreted in the Light of RT: Levels of Expected Optimal Relevance of L2 Classroom Input --Chapter 6. L2 Teaching Implications --References --IndexThis book makes Relevance Theory (RT) relevant for L2 teachers and L2 teacher educators, in particular those working in foreign language teaching contexts. L2 classroom discourse data collected in seven research projects in the years 1984 – 2004 are reinterpreted in this book in the light of Relevance Theory - a theory of interpretation of the incoming messages. In this perspective the teachers’ input for instructed L2 learners facilitates shifts in the learners’ attention from meaning to form and vice versa. Such shifts of attention, according to Relevance Theory, change the level of expected optimal relevance of classroom communication, either focusing the students on form-oriented communication (accuracy), on meaning-oriented communication (fluency) or on meaning and form-oriented communication (fluency combined with accuracy). The latter is considered optimal for L2 learning/acquisition. Apart from the main focus on the relevance-theoretic interpretation of the teachers’ input, the book presents an overview of other theoretical approaches to the question of input for instructed L2 learners: the SLA approach, the communicative L2 teaching perspective, and the L2 classroom discourse approach.Second Language Acquisition S.Language and languagesStudy and teachingSecond language acquisitionDiscourse analysisLanguage and educationL2 acquisition.L2 classroom discourse.L2 learners.L2 learning.L2 teachers.Relevance Theory.SLA.Second Language Acquisition.classroom communication.classroom discourse.input in SLA.Language and languagesStudy and teaching.Second language acquisition.Discourse analysis.Language and education.418.0071Niżegorodcew Anna1718353MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910810948203321Input for instructed L2 learners4115239UNINA