John Flowerdrew, Alan Warren FriedmanResearch Perspectives
Academic Listening
Research Perspectives
Herausgeber: Flowerdew, J. R.
John Flowerdrew, Alan Warren FriedmanResearch Perspectives
Academic Listening
Research Perspectives
Herausgeber: Flowerdew, J. R.
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A collection of original papers by researchers working in the field which comprehensively addresses the area of second language academic listening.
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A collection of original papers by researchers working in the field which comprehensively addresses the area of second language academic listening.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Cambridge Applied Linguistics
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. September 1995
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 532g
- ISBN-13: 9780521455510
- ISBN-10: 0521455510
- Artikelnr.: 21329369
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Cambridge Applied Linguistics
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 320
- Erscheinungstermin: 2. September 1995
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 532g
- ISBN-13: 9780521455510
- ISBN-10: 0521455510
- Artikelnr.: 21329369
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
List of contributors; Series editors' preface; Acknowledgments;
Introduction John Flowerdew; Part I. Background: 1. Research of relevance
to second language lecture comprehension - an overview John Flowerdew; Part
II. The Second Language Academic Listening Process: 2. Expectation-driven
understanding in information systems lecture comprehension Steve Tauroza
and Desmond Allison; 3. The effects of rhetorical signaling cues on the
recall of English lecture information by speakers of English as a native or
second language Patricia A. Dunkel and James N. Davis; 4. Second language
listening comprehension note-taking Craig Chaudron, Lester Loschky and
Janice Cook; 5. On-line summaries as representations of lecture
understanding Michael Rost; Part III. Discourse of Academic Lectures: 6.
Topic identification in lecture discourse Christa Hansen; 7. Variations in
the discourse patterns favoured by different disciplines and their
pedagogical implications Tony Dudley-Evans; 8. University lectures -
macro-structures and micro-features Lynne Young; Part IV. Ethnography of
Second Language Lectures: 9. Lecture listening in an ethnographic
perspective Malcolm J. Benson; 10. By dint of: student and lecturer
perceptions of lecture comprehension strategies in first-term graduate
study Abelle Mason; 11. Visual and verbal messages in the engineering
lecture: notetaking by postgraduate L2 students Philip King; Part V.
Pedagogic Applications: 12. Evaluating lecture comprehension Christa Hansen
and Christine Jensen; 13. Training lecturers for international audiences
Tony Lynch; Conclusion John Flowerdew; Index.
Introduction John Flowerdew; Part I. Background: 1. Research of relevance
to second language lecture comprehension - an overview John Flowerdew; Part
II. The Second Language Academic Listening Process: 2. Expectation-driven
understanding in information systems lecture comprehension Steve Tauroza
and Desmond Allison; 3. The effects of rhetorical signaling cues on the
recall of English lecture information by speakers of English as a native or
second language Patricia A. Dunkel and James N. Davis; 4. Second language
listening comprehension note-taking Craig Chaudron, Lester Loschky and
Janice Cook; 5. On-line summaries as representations of lecture
understanding Michael Rost; Part III. Discourse of Academic Lectures: 6.
Topic identification in lecture discourse Christa Hansen; 7. Variations in
the discourse patterns favoured by different disciplines and their
pedagogical implications Tony Dudley-Evans; 8. University lectures -
macro-structures and micro-features Lynne Young; Part IV. Ethnography of
Second Language Lectures: 9. Lecture listening in an ethnographic
perspective Malcolm J. Benson; 10. By dint of: student and lecturer
perceptions of lecture comprehension strategies in first-term graduate
study Abelle Mason; 11. Visual and verbal messages in the engineering
lecture: notetaking by postgraduate L2 students Philip King; Part V.
Pedagogic Applications: 12. Evaluating lecture comprehension Christa Hansen
and Christine Jensen; 13. Training lecturers for international audiences
Tony Lynch; Conclusion John Flowerdew; Index.
List of contributors; Series editors' preface; Acknowledgments;
Introduction John Flowerdew; Part I. Background: 1. Research of relevance
to second language lecture comprehension - an overview John Flowerdew; Part
II. The Second Language Academic Listening Process: 2. Expectation-driven
understanding in information systems lecture comprehension Steve Tauroza
and Desmond Allison; 3. The effects of rhetorical signaling cues on the
recall of English lecture information by speakers of English as a native or
second language Patricia A. Dunkel and James N. Davis; 4. Second language
listening comprehension note-taking Craig Chaudron, Lester Loschky and
Janice Cook; 5. On-line summaries as representations of lecture
understanding Michael Rost; Part III. Discourse of Academic Lectures: 6.
Topic identification in lecture discourse Christa Hansen; 7. Variations in
the discourse patterns favoured by different disciplines and their
pedagogical implications Tony Dudley-Evans; 8. University lectures -
macro-structures and micro-features Lynne Young; Part IV. Ethnography of
Second Language Lectures: 9. Lecture listening in an ethnographic
perspective Malcolm J. Benson; 10. By dint of: student and lecturer
perceptions of lecture comprehension strategies in first-term graduate
study Abelle Mason; 11. Visual and verbal messages in the engineering
lecture: notetaking by postgraduate L2 students Philip King; Part V.
Pedagogic Applications: 12. Evaluating lecture comprehension Christa Hansen
and Christine Jensen; 13. Training lecturers for international audiences
Tony Lynch; Conclusion John Flowerdew; Index.
Introduction John Flowerdew; Part I. Background: 1. Research of relevance
to second language lecture comprehension - an overview John Flowerdew; Part
II. The Second Language Academic Listening Process: 2. Expectation-driven
understanding in information systems lecture comprehension Steve Tauroza
and Desmond Allison; 3. The effects of rhetorical signaling cues on the
recall of English lecture information by speakers of English as a native or
second language Patricia A. Dunkel and James N. Davis; 4. Second language
listening comprehension note-taking Craig Chaudron, Lester Loschky and
Janice Cook; 5. On-line summaries as representations of lecture
understanding Michael Rost; Part III. Discourse of Academic Lectures: 6.
Topic identification in lecture discourse Christa Hansen; 7. Variations in
the discourse patterns favoured by different disciplines and their
pedagogical implications Tony Dudley-Evans; 8. University lectures -
macro-structures and micro-features Lynne Young; Part IV. Ethnography of
Second Language Lectures: 9. Lecture listening in an ethnographic
perspective Malcolm J. Benson; 10. By dint of: student and lecturer
perceptions of lecture comprehension strategies in first-term graduate
study Abelle Mason; 11. Visual and verbal messages in the engineering
lecture: notetaking by postgraduate L2 students Philip King; Part V.
Pedagogic Applications: 12. Evaluating lecture comprehension Christa Hansen
and Christine Jensen; 13. Training lecturers for international audiences
Tony Lynch; Conclusion John Flowerdew; Index.







