In the age of the global village and the world wide web, understanding the way in which people learn languages is of ever increasing importance. This book makes the essentials of this rapidly expanding area of study accessible to readers encountering it for the first time.
Professor Rod Ellis is Professor in the Department of Applied Language Studies and Linguistics at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. He has worked in Zambia, the UK, Japan, and the U.S.A for extended periods. He has published a number of books on second language acquisition and teacher education. He has also published EFL/ESL textbooks. His main interest lies in the application of second language theory and research to language teaching.
He is co-author of Analysing Learner Language, and author of Second Language Acquisition, SLA Research and Language Teaching, The Study of Language Acquisition, which won the English Speaking Union's Duke of Edinburgh Book Competition, Understanding Second Language Acquisition, which won the BAAL Book Prize, and Task-based Language Learning and Teaching, all published by Oxford University Press.
Short, concise overview of topics in second language acquisition. Gave me exactly what I needed - a quick overview of the topic. I would have preferred a longer Survey section (the overview) and less in the Readings section, but that's just me.
A brief introduction to many important aspects of SLA. Good way to refresh what you already know. References are cut out for easy reading, though it would have been better if specific references were included in the main text.
Ellis provide a comprehensive understanding of Second Language Acquisition (SLA) theories. It is a MUST READ for linguist who specialized in SLA major.
My workplace’s library has this series and I wanted to get a sense of it so I tested the waters w/ this title. As a series, I think it’s pretty good. The survey section lays out a decent foundation. The readings and references sections offer enough options to dig deeper into the subject of interest.
All the above holds true for this specific title too. It’s dated, originally published in 1997–the edition I read published was published in 2012, but has a solid core to it. Probably best to look into current websites, blogs, magazines, journals, and books if your curious about the current state of the field.
Very short introduction, mostly written from a generative perspective, other theories are not dealt with or not discussed in depth, some information is outdated
My learning: There is no best way of Second Language Acquisition that works for everyone. Not a surprise but rather it is understandable and a bit disappointed as a novice educator.
OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 9/27/2013=80minutes 7 word summary=second language acquisition target input studies child Discussion Question Why is the study of SLA needed for us? I think that using more than two languages are important for communication all around the world because internationalization is expanding now. Moreover, it leads to earn much money finally. Therefore, the study is useful when learners learn languages.
This book tells you the outline of second language acquisition. There are too many factors in SLA, so this will be introductory book for you
A wonderful succinct introduction to a plethora of paramount aspects of SLA. Prof. Ellis has always left me with food for thought; intriguing questions from this gripping book are - I believe - as follows:
1. "Does instruction that emphasises input-processing work better than instruction which emphasises output production?"
2. Does strategy use result in learning or does learning increase learners' ability to employ more strategies?" (p. 78)
3. "... not enough is known about which strategies and which combinations of strategies work best for L2 acquisition" (P. 87).
I read this chapter by chapter alongside other articles and tests regarding second language acquisition for a grad course. The other texts enriched the context and expanded on the theories. I enjoyed this concise, clear text that gave an objective introduction to the various theories regarding the study of second language acquisition. This is a good introduction for anyone interested in the study of linguistics, language pedagogy or the sociology of multilingual communities.
A good basic overview of theories and approaches to SLA. Chapters 7-9 will be the most applicable to language teachers. the bibliography seemed a little small, and many of the sources were journal articles that most people will be unable to access without paying for them.