ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Language Awareness is a comprehensive and informative overview of the broad field of language awareness. It contains a collection of state-of-the-art reviews of both established themes and new directions, authored and edited by experts in the field. The handbook is divided into three sections and reflects the engaging diversity of language awareness perspectives on language teaching and teachers, language learning and learners, and extending to additional areas of importance that are less directly concerned with language instruction.

In their introductory chapter, the editors provide valuable background to the language awareness field along with their summary of the chapters and issues covered. A helpful section giving further reading suggestions for each of the chapters is included at the end of the book. This volume is essential reading for graduate students and researchers working in the sphere of language awareness within applied linguistics, sociolinguistics and across the wider spectrum of language and communication.

chapter |19 pages

Language Awareness

Opening Up the Field of Study

part |182 pages

Focus on Language Teaching and Teachers

chapter |17 pages

Form-Focused Instruction

chapter |16 pages

English-medium Instruction in Multilingual University Settings

An Opportunity for Developing Language Awareness

chapter |17 pages

Language Awareness and Assessment

part |151 pages

Focus on Language Learning and Learners

chapter |16 pages

Revisiting Research on L2 Learner Beliefs

Looking Back and Looking Forward

part |144 pages

Beyond Language Pedagogy

chapter |18 pages

Language Awareness and Multimodality

A Social Semiotic Approach to Visual Composition

chapter |12 pages

Folk Linguistics and Language Awareness

chapter |15 pages

Language Awareness and Language Change

chapter |17 pages

Language Awareness in Diasporic Contexts

chapter |17 pages

Language Awareness and Translation

chapter |17 pages

Contesting Key Terms and Concepts in the Civil Sphere

A Neo-Gramscian Analysis of Language Awareness