Professional experience, as well as a great deal of published research (e.g. Gass & Varonis, 1991; Varonis & Gass, 1985a), suggests that even successful users of English as a second language unwittingly give rise to communication problems when encoding and decoding certain features of language, both linguistic and pragmatic. Among the latter is the issue of referring (for example, by pronouns or lexical substitution) to people, places and objects not in the immediate context. This paper, based on a wider study, outlines a procedure in which teachers were asked, via stimulated recall sessions, to reflect on previously-recorded pair work interactions and to discuss occasions where problematic communication occurred, or did not occur. Close an...
A case study is presented of a ten-year-old child described as having comprehension difficulties, in...
International audienceStudies on instruction and communication at a distance are generally clinical ...
AbstractMany communicative teachers consider teacher talk as an obstacle that restricts students’ le...
Professional experience, as well as a great deal of published research (e.g. Gass & Varonis, 1991; V...
This chapter reports an investigation into areas of miscommunication in interactions between first a...
Many studies have explored the difficulties faced by foreign language learners when they begin the l...
People give feedback in conversation: both positive signals of understanding, such as nods, and nega...
One of the enduring problems that second language educators face is in determining which of the myri...
This talk discusses the exploratory approach and findings of a collaborative project that focused on...
Miscommunications appear to offer powerful L2 learning opportunities. In particular, they often arou...
textNegotiation of meaning refers to interactional work executed by interlocutors to achieve a mutu...
peer-reviewedWhile interaction inside the classroom frontstage discourse has been a subject ofst...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69127/2/10.1177_003368828001100204.pd
Two critical incidents at a UK university where I teach, and teach about\ud teaching, English to spe...
This paper examines conversation topic management by Japanese learners of English at a private unive...
A case study is presented of a ten-year-old child described as having comprehension difficulties, in...
International audienceStudies on instruction and communication at a distance are generally clinical ...
AbstractMany communicative teachers consider teacher talk as an obstacle that restricts students’ le...
Professional experience, as well as a great deal of published research (e.g. Gass & Varonis, 1991; V...
This chapter reports an investigation into areas of miscommunication in interactions between first a...
Many studies have explored the difficulties faced by foreign language learners when they begin the l...
People give feedback in conversation: both positive signals of understanding, such as nods, and nega...
One of the enduring problems that second language educators face is in determining which of the myri...
This talk discusses the exploratory approach and findings of a collaborative project that focused on...
Miscommunications appear to offer powerful L2 learning opportunities. In particular, they often arou...
textNegotiation of meaning refers to interactional work executed by interlocutors to achieve a mutu...
peer-reviewedWhile interaction inside the classroom frontstage discourse has been a subject ofst...
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/69127/2/10.1177_003368828001100204.pd
Two critical incidents at a UK university where I teach, and teach about\ud teaching, English to spe...
This paper examines conversation topic management by Japanese learners of English at a private unive...
A case study is presented of a ten-year-old child described as having comprehension difficulties, in...
International audienceStudies on instruction and communication at a distance are generally clinical ...
AbstractMany communicative teachers consider teacher talk as an obstacle that restricts students’ le...