International Perspectives on Creative Writing in Second Language Education

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bee Chamcharatsri ◽  
Atsushi Iida

Eye brings you another batch of the latest products and books on offerBaby Curve from Play to Z Ltd £30. http://playtoz.co.uk/sensory-resources/sensory-bambini/; Tel: 01206 796722 Review by Jane WebbEarly Years Observation and Planning in practice by Jenny Barber (ISBN: 9781909280243). £19.99. Paperback. Published by Practical Pre-School Books. Tel: 01722 716935; [email protected]; www.practicalpreschoolbooks.com Review by Martine HorvathResearch Methods in Early Childhood by Penny Mukherji and Deborah Albon (ISBN: 9781446273692). Paperback. £24.99 Published by SAGE Publications Ltd. www.sagepublications.com; Tel: 020 73248500 Review by Martine HorvathPicture books All reviews by Martine HorvathObserving Young Children by Tina Bruce, Stella Louis and Georgie McCall (ISBN: 9781446285817). Paperback. £19.99. Published by SAGE Publications Ltd. www.sagepublications.com; Tel: 020 73248500 Review by Martine HorvathPlaybales from Playgarden Design and Resources £349 for a set of 12 or £249 for a set of 8. They can be purchased at www.playgardens.co.uk, in the Play Resources section; Tel: 0114 282 1285 Review by Susan HowarthEarly Years Second Language Education: International Perspectives on Theory and Practice edited by Sandie Mourao and Monica Lourenco (ISBN: 9780415705271). Hardback. £90. Published by Routledge. www.routledge.com/education; orders via 01235 400400; [email protected] Review by Susan HowarthRisk, Challenge and Adventure in the Early Years by Kathryn Solly (ISBN: 9780415667401). Paperback. £19.99. Published by Routledge. www.routledge.com/education; orders via 01235 400400; [email protected] Review by Dr Sue Allingham

2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (12) ◽  
pp. 54-56

2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-170
Author(s):  
Ellen Simon ◽  
Chloé Lybaert

Abstract As a result of growing mobility and migration flows, the number of non-native speakers of Dutch in Belgium and the Netherlands have gradually increased over the past decades and so have the number of people enrolled in Dutch as a Second Language education. While there is huge variation in the profiles of these non-native speakers, they almost exclusively have in common that their Dutch sounds, in some way and at some stage, accented. In line with worldwide trends in foreign language teaching, the pronunciation goal in Dutch as a Second Language education has shifted from native-like to intelligible. Indeed, the notion of intelligibility has become prominent in language teaching and assessment. In this paper, we discuss the complexity of this notion and set it off against related terms like ‘comprehensibility’ and ‘foreign accent’. Through a literature review, we argue that intelligibility is an interactional and context-sensitive phenomenon: it is as much a responsibility of the speaker as it is of the listener or conversational partner(s) in general, whose attitudes will have an impact on the intelligibility and thus on the conversational flow and communicative success. After reviewing literature on the intelligibility of Dutch as a Second Language, we end by formulating some promising lines for future research.


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