Catalog Search
 
Advanced Search

My shopping cart cart icon
Your cart is empty

My wish list wishlist icon
Your wish list is empty



Last update:
9 February 2010

© John Benjamins
Home

Corpora and Language Learners

Cover image
Edited by Guy Aston, Silvia Bernardini and Dominic Stewart
University of Bologna at Forlì

2004. vi, 312 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 2288 6 / EUR 99.00
978 1 58811 574 4 / USD 149.00
Add to shopping cart

e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9503 3 / EUR 99.00 / USD 149.00
Ordering information

Add to wish list

Corpus-aided language pedagogy is one of the central application areas of corpus methodologies, and a test bed for theories of language and learning. This volume provides an overview of current trends, offering methodological and theoretical position statements along with results from empirical studies. The relationship between corpora and learning is examined from complementary perspectives — the study of learner language, the didactic use of corpus findings, and the interaction between corpora and their users. Reflections on current theory and technology open and close the volume.

With its focus on the learner and the learning setting, Corpora and Language Learners is addressed to corpus linguists with an interest in learner language, applied linguists wishing to expand their understanding of corpora and their pedagogic potential, and language teachers wishing to critically assess the relevance of work in this field.

This volume grew out of selected presentations at the 5th Teaching and Language Corpora conference in Bertinoro, Italy.


Table of contents

Introduction
Dominic Stewart, Silvia Bernardini and Guy Aston
1–18
A theory for TaLC?
The textual priming of Lexis
Michael Hoey
21–41
Corpora by learners?
Multiple comparisons of IL, L1 and TL corpora: The case of L2 acquisition of verb subcategorization patterns by Japanese learners of English
Yukio Tono
45–66
New wine in old skins? A corpus investigation of L1 syntactic transfer in learner language
Lars Borin
67–87
Demonstratives as anaphora markers in advanced leaners' English
Agnieszka Lenko-Szymanska
89–107
How learner corpus analysis can contribute to language teaching: A study of support verb constructions
Nadja Nesselhauf
109–124
The problem-solution pattern in apprentice vs. professional technical writing: an application of appraisal theory
Lynne Flowerdew
125–135
Using a corpus of children's writing to test a solution to the sample size problem affecting type-token ratios
N. Chipere, D. Malvern and Brian Richards
139–147
Corpora for learners?
Comparing real and ideal language learner input: The use of an EFL textbook corpus in corpus linguistics and language teaching
Ute Römer
151–168
Can the L in TALC stand for Literature?
Bernhard Kettemann and Georg Marko
169–193
Speech corpora in the classroom
Anna Mauranen
195–211
Lost in parallel concordances
Ana Frankenberg-Garcia
213–229
Corpora with learners?
Examining native speakers' and learners' investigation of the same concordance data and its implications for classroom concordancing with ELF learners
Passapong Sripicharn
233–245
Some Lessons Students Learn: Self-discovery and Corpora
Pascual Pérez-Paredes and Pascual Cantos-Gomez
247–257
Student use of large, annotated corpora to analyze syntactic variation
Mark Davies
259–269
A future for TaLC?
Facilitating the compilation and dissemination of ad-hoc web corpora
William H. Fletcher
273–300
Index
301–305
Bionotes
307–311


Aston et al's 2004 collection will be a valuable resource for teachers seeking working and prospective solutions, as well as up-to-date theoretical motivations, for corpus-informed teaching practice.
Przemyslaw Kaszubski, Adam Mickiewicz University, on Linguist List 16.1893 (2005)

This volume is a nice addition to the Benjamins series Studies in Corpus Linguistics. For anyone interested in corpora and issues related to using corpora in the language classroom, this book covers a range of topics from a variety of perspectives. The topics covered and the number of chapters that address actual classroom use of corpora reflect the increased interest in corpora as an area of relevance for language instructors.
Randi Reppen, Northern Arizona University, in Studies in Second Language Acquisition 28(1), 2006

For anyone interested in finding out about the present state of the art of research in the rapidly evolving field of teaching language and linguistics using corpora, this volume provides a broad overview covering many different areas of research and topics that are being addressed.
Nelleke Oostdijk, Radboud University Nijmegen, in English Studies 88(3), 2007