Language learning is a commitment to the state of the arts of Asian Studies, but also one of the tools needed to practice in the field. As scholars in Asian Studies, we have an obligation to ensure that these tools are passed on to future scholars, for use in ways we have not yet managed and in situations we have not yet experienced. Transferring language skills requires good teaching, and good teachingarguably rests on a passion for learning, in practice as well as in principle. We can facilitate this transferral through our own practice: keeping abreast of literaturein our field language; developing (second) language skills with which to publish outside the Anglophone centre and creating opportunities for dialogue in our field language(s)...
Acquisition of English as an added language is a worldwide challenge, and although a well-recognised...
Language can be a bridge to understanding a culture, as in learning a language is then indirectly we...
This report is neither a celebration nor, to say it in Australian, a whinge. It provides a snapshot ...
Language learning is a commitment to the state of the arts of Asian Studies, but also one of the too...
On Wednesday 28 September 2011, Prime Minister Gillard announced that the Australian Government had ...
The history of Asian language study in Australia has been about a struggle for recognition. For much...
In recent years, there has been an increasing demand for, and rapid development in, the learning and...
The place of foreign language learning in education has a rich and diverse history since the introdu...
My question for this short paper is simple: as scholars involved in Asian Studies should it not be a...
The impressive and stimulating essays in Bridging Transcultural Divides deal with the cultural and e...
As we attempt to deal with future challenges and uncertainties, the significance of Australia’s rela...
The Australian project of accommodation to the Asia-Pacific region as the dynamic centre of the worl...
My question for this short paper is simple: as scholars involved in Asian Studies should it not be a...
Over the last decade task-based approaches to language learning and teaching (TBLT) have become a gl...
Language does not exist in a vacuum. It interacts with culture and thought both as an actor and a re...
Acquisition of English as an added language is a worldwide challenge, and although a well-recognised...
Language can be a bridge to understanding a culture, as in learning a language is then indirectly we...
This report is neither a celebration nor, to say it in Australian, a whinge. It provides a snapshot ...
Language learning is a commitment to the state of the arts of Asian Studies, but also one of the too...
On Wednesday 28 September 2011, Prime Minister Gillard announced that the Australian Government had ...
The history of Asian language study in Australia has been about a struggle for recognition. For much...
In recent years, there has been an increasing demand for, and rapid development in, the learning and...
The place of foreign language learning in education has a rich and diverse history since the introdu...
My question for this short paper is simple: as scholars involved in Asian Studies should it not be a...
The impressive and stimulating essays in Bridging Transcultural Divides deal with the cultural and e...
As we attempt to deal with future challenges and uncertainties, the significance of Australia’s rela...
The Australian project of accommodation to the Asia-Pacific region as the dynamic centre of the worl...
My question for this short paper is simple: as scholars involved in Asian Studies should it not be a...
Over the last decade task-based approaches to language learning and teaching (TBLT) have become a gl...
Language does not exist in a vacuum. It interacts with culture and thought both as an actor and a re...
Acquisition of English as an added language is a worldwide challenge, and although a well-recognised...
Language can be a bridge to understanding a culture, as in learning a language is then indirectly we...
This report is neither a celebration nor, to say it in Australian, a whinge. It provides a snapshot ...