Formal Linguistics and Language Education
Autor: | Andreas Trotzke, Tanja Kupisch |
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EAN: | 9783030392574 |
eBook Format: | |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Produktart: | eBook |
Veröffentlichungsdatum: | 10.06.2020 |
Untertitel: | New Empirical Perspectives |
Kategorie: | |
Schlagworte: | language didactics;formal language teaching;language teacher education;learning first and second languages;language pedagogy;language teacher training |
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This volume focuses on work that has its origin and motivation in formal linguistics and theory-driven research on the acquisition of grammar, and on this basis tries to establish links to language pedagogy, including students' and teachers' beliefs about what 'grammar' actually is. The contributions to this volume cover a wide range of empirical linguistic domains and concern aspects of morphosyntax, including word order, inflectional morphology, article systems, pronouns, compounding patterns, as well as orthography and students' general beliefs about grammar.
Andreas Trotzke is Außerplanmäßiger Professor in the Department of Linguistics, University of Konstanz and Research Fellow at the Autonomous University of Barcelona. Trotzke is General Editor of the journal Pedagogical Linguistics. He got his PhD from the University of Freiburg in 2010 and has been a lecturer at the University of Potsdam and a postdoctoral fellow/visiting professor at MIT (2015), UC San Diego (2015), Stanford University (2016-2017), and UPF Barcelona (2018). He has recently been awarded the prestigious International Chair 2017 Empirical Foundations of Linguistics at Université Sorbonne Paris Cité/CNRS. His areas of expertise include the syntax-pragmatics interface, psycholinguistics, and language education.
Tanja Kupisch is Full Professor at the Department of Linguistics, University of Konstanz and Professor II at UiT The Arctic University of Norway. She got her PhD from the University of Hamburg in 2006, specializing in bilingual first language acquisition. She has worked as a researcher and teacher at the universities of Calgary, McGill, Hamburg, Lund, Konstanz, and Tromsø, specializing in first, second, and third language acquisition, heritage bilingualism, bilectal acquisition, and language attrition, including child and adult learners. Her work focuses on phenomena such as nominal syntax and foreign accent, including the languages French, Italian, English, German, Turkish, and Russian.