
Understanding Variability in Second Language Acquisition, Bilingualism, and Cognition
Description
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The book advocates a system approach as a counterpoint to existing scholarship, which has tended to focus on a small set of variables. The 13 chapters demonstrate the ways in which cognitive and linguistic development are intrinsically linked, occurring within a nested structure of multiple levels: individual neuro-cognitive systems and processes, individual engagement with the social world, and the wider social and institutional environments and cultural contexts affecting the belief systems and linguistic conventions of social groups. The volume begins by outlining the theoretical and methodological foundations before moving into a more focused look at the interplay of these different variables at the macro, meso, and micro levels. A final section features two commentary chapters from linguistics and psychology, respectively, synthesizing insights from earlier chapters and situating the collection within broader scholarship on linguistic and cognitive development, theoretical and methodological implications, and discussions of avenues for future empirical research.
This book will be of particular interest to scholars in second language acquisition, psycholinguistics, cognition, psychology, and sociology.
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Persons
Adam Winsler is Professor of Applied Developmental Psychology at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, USA. He has published more than 100 journal articles and 2 books on topics including English-Spanish bilingualism, bilingual education, L1 language maintenance and loss, and the academic performance over time of ethnically diverse dual language learners and immigrant students in poverty in the USA. He also does research on children's private speech, selfregulation, and executive function and was the former editor of Early Childhood Research Quarterly.
Content
List of Contributors
Preface
PART I: Theoretical and methodological considerations
Chapter 1: Investigating cognitive-linguistic development in SLA: Theoretical and methodological challenges for empirical research
Kristin Kersten, Werner Greve
Chapter 2: Lost in Translation? On some key features of dynamical systems theorizing invoked in SLA research
Anke Lenzing, Manfred Pienemann, Howard Nicholas
Chapter 3: How many moderators does is take till we know... that too many bilingual advantage effects have died?
Julia Festman, Sophia Czapka, Adam Winsler
PART II: The interplay of variables on macro-, meso-, and micro-levels
Chapter 4: The Proximity of Stimulation Hypothesis: Investigating the interplay of social and instructional variables with the cognitive-linguistic skills of young L2 learners
Kristin Kersten
Chapter 5: Becoming bilingual in Miami, USA: Predictors and outcomes of speed of English acquisition for low-income, dual-language learners
Adam Winsler
Chapter 6: Immigrant achievement and language use across countries: The role of family background and education systems
Janna Teltemann, Maximilian Brinkmann, Nora Huth, Reinhard Schunck
Chapter 7: The interplay between learner-internal variables and levels of anxiety and enjoyment among Spanish EFL learners
Jean-Marc Dewaele
Chapter 8: Early bilingualism increases the likelihood of taking (and mastering) foreign language courses later in secondary school
My Viet Ha Nguyen, Adam Winsler
Chapter 9: From differential to dynamic: The role of working memory in second language (L2) learning
Ellen J. Serafini
Chapter 10: Can type of schooling compensate for low SES? Investigating effects of instruction and SES on cognitive skills
Ann-Christin Bruhn, Lisa Miller, Claudia Maehler, Katharina Ponto, Kristin Kersten
PART III: Synthesis
Chapter 11: Commentary on "Understanding variability in second language acquisition, bilingualism, and cognition": A Second Language Acquisition perspective
Gabriele Pallotti
Chapter 12: Commentary: Toward a developmental science of language acquisition
Werner Greve
Index
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