Beschreibung
The author addresses key questions of foreign language teaching: How does foreign language learning take place? What is the mechanism of foreign language use and learning? What are the sources of our understanding of these processes? What significance does our understanding have for foreign language teaching?
Autorenportrait
Maria Dakowska is a Professor of Applied Linguistics affiliated with the Institute of English Studies at the University of Warsaw (Poland). She works with EFL (English as a Foreign Language) teacher trainees, lectures, as well as conducts MA and PhD seminars on TEFL. Her academic interests range from Foreign Language Didactics as a scientific discipline to conceptions, current developments and strategies of teaching English as a foreign language. She has studied at universities in Britain, the US and Germany, authored six monographs and numerous articles in Poland and abroad.
Inhalt
Contents: A retrospective sketch of evolving conceptions of language in the field of foreign language teaching – Issues in dealing with the complexity of language learning as a subject-matter of an autonomous empirical discipline – Human cognitive mechanism for information processing – Verbal communication as a phenomenon, its nature and structure – Comprehension and production in speech and writing with potential applications for the field of teaching.