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Last update:
2 September 2010

© John Benjamins
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Individual Differences and Instructed Language Learning

Edited by Peter Robinson
Aoyama Gakuin University

2002. xii, 387 pp.
Publishing status: Available

HardboundIn stock
978 90 272 1693 9 / EUR 95.00
978 1 58811 230 9 / USD 143.00
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PaperbackIn stock
978 90 272 1694 6 / EUR 33.00
978 1 58811 231 6 / USD 49.95

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e-BookAvailable from e-book platforms
978 90 272 9751 8 / EUR 95.00 / USD 143.00
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Second language learners differ in how successfully they adapt to, and profit from, instruction. This book aims to show that adaptation to L2 instruction, and subsequent L2 learning, is a result of the interaction between learner characteristics and learning contexts. Describing and explaining these interactions is fundamentally important to theories of instructed SLA, and for effective L2 pedagogy. This collection is the first to explore this important issue in contemporary task-based, immersion, and communicative pedagogic settings. In the first section, leading experts in individual differences research describe recent advances in theories of intelligence, L2 aptitude, motivation, anxiety and emotion, and the relationship of native language abilities to L2 learning. In the second section, these theoretical insights are applied to empirical studies of individual differences-treatment interactions in classroom learning, experimental studies of the effects of focus on form and incidental learning, and studies of naturalistic versus instructed SLA.


Table of contents

Preface
ix
1. Introduction: Researching individual differences and instructed learning
Peter Robinson
1–10
Section I: Theoretical Issues
2. The theory of successful intelligence and its implications for language-aptitude testing
Robert J. Sternberg
13–43
3. Motivation, anxiety and emotion in second language acquisition
Peter D. MacIntyre
45–68
4. Theorising and updating aptitude
Peter Skehan
69–93
5. Foreign language acquisition and language-based learning disabilities
Elena L. Grigorenko
95–112
6. Learning conditions, aptitude complexes, and SLA: A framework for research and pedagogy
Peter Robinson
113–133
Section II: Empirical Studies
7. The motivational basis of language learning tasks
Zoltán Dörnyei
137–158
8. The role of learners’ language analytic ability in the communicative classroom
Leila Ranta
159–180
9. Individual differences in working memory, noticing of interactional feedback and L2 development
Alison Mackey, Jenefer Philp, Takako Egi, Akiko Fujii and Tomoaki Tatsumi
181–209
10. Effects of individual differences in intelligence, aptitude and working memory on adult incidental SLA: A replication and extension of Reber, Walkenfield and Hernstadt (1991)
Peter Robinson
211–266
11. Aptitude-exposure interaction effects on Wh-movement violation detection by pre-and-post-critical period Japanese bilinguals
Steven Ross, Naoko Yoshinaga and Miyuki Sasaki
267–299
12. Age, aptitude and second language learning on a bilingual exchange
Birgit Harley and Doug Hart
301–330
References
331–371
Index
373–385


This book provides a broad approach to individual differences in second language learning, from the theoretical to the empirical, from the cognitive to the affective, from broad frameworks to fine-grained studies by first-rate researchers. It also dwells more than any other book so far on the interaction between aptitudes and treatments or contexts in second language learning.

A generation after Lee Cronbach and Richard Snow widely publicized the need for and potential of aptitude-treatment interaction research, we finally have a volume that does justice to this topic in the field of second language learning. It provides numerous ideas for future research, from broad hypotheses to test, to areas of language to focus on, to statistical techniques for data analysis.

For anybody interested in how individual differences interact with L2 learning conditions, this book is not just interesting, it is exciting and inspiring.
Robert DeKeyser, University of Pittsburgh

A very interesting book to read for those scholars interested in cognitive abilities, motivation and second language learning. The book also provides interesting hints for methodological improvements in EFL/ESL teaching.
Ana Llinares Garcia, Universidad Autonoma de Madrid on Linguist List Vol-14-194, 2003

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. Robinson has put together the most comprehensive collection I have seen to date on individual differences in SLA. The volume covers an impressively wide range of theoretical and empirical issues and does so from different perspectives, many which I found new and refreshing. This will be essential reading for both and seasoned researchers. I'll be consulting this book often.
Norman Segalowitz, Concordia University, Montreal

I found much that will be of value in my own teaching — at both the introductory and advanced levels. The overview chapters are excellent for introducing novices to the issues and the developments in the field; the empirical research reports are varied in approach and context, offering excellent examples of different ways to investigate questions about individual difference.

In all the chapters I was impressed by the tone of respect and genuine scholarly debate as authors engaged with previous and current researchers whose theories and findings often differed from their own. I attribute this tone and the seriousness of the scholarly approach to the role of the editor whose own contributions are models of thoroughness and fairness.
Patsy M. Lightbown, Concordia University, Montreal

The significant advance, and unifying coherence, of this book is to describe, in a variety of educational settings around the world, the array of psychological constructs that combine and interact in the learning and teaching of languages. The interrelations prove to be more intricate, and more intriguing, than most previous books or single theories would have had us believe.
Alister Cumming, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto

Based on solid research and ground-breaking theoretical speculation, this book is a must for anyone who aims to gain more insight in the impact of individual learner variables on instructed second language acquisition, and is a source of inspiration for anyone looking for ways in which the individual language learner's needs can be better catered for in the second language classroom in the future.


Kris Van den Branden, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, in International Review of Applied Linguistics 2006