Teaching and Researching Motivation: Applied Linguistics in Action
Autor Zoltán Dörnyei, Ema Ushiodaen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 apr 2021
Key new features and material:
- exploration of the motivation to learn languages other than English (LOTEs);
- principles for designing L2 motivational studies;
- discussion of emerging areas of research, including unconscious motivation and language learning mindsets.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781138543461
ISBN-10: 1138543462
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 1 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:Nouă
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Applied Linguistics in Action
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1138543462
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 1 Line drawings, black and white; 1 Halftones, black and white; 2 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:Nouă
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Applied Linguistics in Action
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
PostgraduateCuprins
Introduction to the Third Edition
Part I What is motivation?
1. Exploring motivation: Changing perspectives
1.1 The complexity of motivation
1.2 Understanding L2 motivation in a changing, multifaceted world
1.3 The motivation to learn Global English versus other languages
2. Theories of motivation in psychology
2.1 Key cognitive theories of motivation
2.2 Motivation and its sociocultural context
3. Motivation to learn a foreign/second language: A historical overview
3.1 The social psychological beginnings
3.2 Accounting for cognitive theories and the classroom reality
3.3 Focus on time, context and vision
4. Current approaches in theorising L2 motivation
4.1 Motivational dynamics
4.2 Motivational currents and long-term motivation
4.3 Unconscious motivation
4.4 Motivation, multilingualism and languages other than English (LOTEs)
4.5 Other recent theoretical initiatives
4.6 ‘Small lens’ approach and student engagement
Part II Motivation and language teaching
5. Motivation in practice: Strategies and approaches
5.1 From theory and research to classroom practice
5.2 A framework for motivational strategies
5.4 Promoting motivational self-regulation and learner autonomy
5.5 Generating and sustaining a vision for L2 learning
5.6 Engaging L2 learners
5.7 Frameworks for directed motivational currents
5.8 The motivational capacity of technology
5.9 Researching motivational strategies
6. Motivation in context: Demotivating influences
6.1 ‘Demotivation’ versus ‘motivation’
6.2 Research findings on L2 demotivation
6.3 The relevance of fixed and growth mindsets
6.4 Critical factors in the broader sociocultural context
7. Teacher motivation
7.1 Conceptualising the ‘motivation to teach’
7.2 The motivation of L2 teachers
7.3 Teacher motivation and student motivation: Exploring their interplay
Part III Researching motivation
8. Making motivation a researchable concept
8.1 Inherent challenges of motivation research
8.2 Linear cause-effect relationships versus dynamic interdependence
8.3 Group versus individual-level measurement
8.4 Context-sensitive approaches to understanding motivation
8.5 Principles of designing L2 motivation studies
8.6 Motivation research and impact on society
8.7 How to make motivation research fruitful
9. Main types and methods of motivation research
9.1 Quantitative motivation studies
9.2 Qualitative motivation studies
9.3 Mixing methodologies
9.4 New directions in L2 motivation research
Part IV Resources and further information
10. The locus of motivation research: Linkages to other topics and disciplines
10.1 L2 motivation and related disciplines in the social sciences
10.2 The challenge of relating L2 motivation to applied linguistics and SLA
10.3 Defining target aspects of L2 communication
11. Sources and resources
11.1 Relevant journals and edited collections
11.2 Databases, citation indexes, Internet resources and discussion groups
11.3 Who’s who in L2 motivation research?
11.4 Locating motivation measures and instruments
Subject index
Author index
Part I What is motivation?
1. Exploring motivation: Changing perspectives
1.1 The complexity of motivation
1.2 Understanding L2 motivation in a changing, multifaceted world
1.3 The motivation to learn Global English versus other languages
2. Theories of motivation in psychology
2.1 Key cognitive theories of motivation
2.2 Motivation and its sociocultural context
3. Motivation to learn a foreign/second language: A historical overview
3.1 The social psychological beginnings
3.2 Accounting for cognitive theories and the classroom reality
3.3 Focus on time, context and vision
4. Current approaches in theorising L2 motivation
4.1 Motivational dynamics
4.2 Motivational currents and long-term motivation
4.3 Unconscious motivation
4.4 Motivation, multilingualism and languages other than English (LOTEs)
4.5 Other recent theoretical initiatives
4.6 ‘Small lens’ approach and student engagement
Part II Motivation and language teaching
5. Motivation in practice: Strategies and approaches
5.1 From theory and research to classroom practice
5.2 A framework for motivational strategies
5.4 Promoting motivational self-regulation and learner autonomy
5.5 Generating and sustaining a vision for L2 learning
5.6 Engaging L2 learners
5.7 Frameworks for directed motivational currents
5.8 The motivational capacity of technology
5.9 Researching motivational strategies
6. Motivation in context: Demotivating influences
6.1 ‘Demotivation’ versus ‘motivation’
6.2 Research findings on L2 demotivation
6.3 The relevance of fixed and growth mindsets
6.4 Critical factors in the broader sociocultural context
7. Teacher motivation
7.1 Conceptualising the ‘motivation to teach’
7.2 The motivation of L2 teachers
7.3 Teacher motivation and student motivation: Exploring their interplay
Part III Researching motivation
8. Making motivation a researchable concept
8.1 Inherent challenges of motivation research
8.2 Linear cause-effect relationships versus dynamic interdependence
8.3 Group versus individual-level measurement
8.4 Context-sensitive approaches to understanding motivation
8.5 Principles of designing L2 motivation studies
8.6 Motivation research and impact on society
8.7 How to make motivation research fruitful
9. Main types and methods of motivation research
9.1 Quantitative motivation studies
9.2 Qualitative motivation studies
9.3 Mixing methodologies
9.4 New directions in L2 motivation research
Part IV Resources and further information
10. The locus of motivation research: Linkages to other topics and disciplines
10.1 L2 motivation and related disciplines in the social sciences
10.2 The challenge of relating L2 motivation to applied linguistics and SLA
10.3 Defining target aspects of L2 communication
11. Sources and resources
11.1 Relevant journals and edited collections
11.2 Databases, citation indexes, Internet resources and discussion groups
11.3 Who’s who in L2 motivation research?
11.4 Locating motivation measures and instruments
Subject index
Author index
Notă biografică
Zoltán Dörnyei is Professor of Psycholinguistics at the School of English, University of Nottingham. He has published extensively on various aspects of language learner characteristics and second language acquisition, and he is the (co-)author of over 100 academic papers and 25 books.
Ema Ushioda is Professor and Head of Applied Linguistics at the University of Warwick. Her main research interests are language learning motivation and learner autonomy, promoting qualitative approaches in particular, and she has published widely in these areas.
Ema Ushioda is Professor and Head of Applied Linguistics at the University of Warwick. Her main research interests are language learning motivation and learner autonomy, promoting qualitative approaches in particular, and she has published widely in these areas.
Descriere
This book reflects the dramatic changes in the field of motivation research. With an increased emphasis on dynamic perspectives on motivation and its relations with other individual, social and contextual factors, the book offers ways in which this research can be put to practical use in the classroom and in research.