Alberto Lombardero Caparrós
Two Centuries of English Language Teaching and Learning in Spain
1769-1970
Alberto Lombardero Caparrós
Two Centuries of English Language Teaching and Learning in Spain
1769-1970
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This book provides an exhaustive historical account of how the English language was taught and learnt in Spain over two centuries.
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This book provides an exhaustive historical account of how the English language was taught and learnt in Spain over two centuries.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 206
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Oktober 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 479g
- ISBN-13: 9789462986282
- ISBN-10: 9462986282
- Artikelnr.: 58058661
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 206
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Oktober 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 479g
- ISBN-13: 9789462986282
- ISBN-10: 9462986282
- Artikelnr.: 58058661
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Alberto Lombardero Caparrós (Badalona, Catalonia, 1968) earned his PhD in English Applied Linguistics with a cum laude and European mention in 2015, from University Rovira i Virgili, Tarragona. He has studied and worked both in Scotland (University of Aberdeen) and England (University of Warwick). Since 2017, he is a lecturer of English at the private University CESAG (Centro de Educación Superior Alberta Giménez). His principal research interests are English language teaching methodologies and the historiography of English language teaching in Spain. He has published on the history of ELT in Spain in Language and History, Documents pour l'histoire du français langue étrangère ou seconde, and Signo y Seña. He is currently involved in a forthcoming online publication on the history of translation and foreign language teaching in nineteenth-century Spain.
Introduction 1. The significance of the historiography of foreign language
teaching 2. Approaches 3. Publications on the historiography of foreign
language teaching in Spain 4. The historiography of English language
teaching in Spain: A retrospective 5. Methodology of the present work
CHAPTER 1: The inception of ELT in Spain (1769-1850) 1.1. Political and
socio-cultural framework 1.2. The socio-cultural context 1.3. European
foreign language teaching framework 1.4. The origins of ELT in Spain: where
and how 1.4.1. Where was English taught between 1769 and 1850? 1.4.2. How
was English taught? 1.5. Conclusion CHAPTER 2: ELT in Spain (1850-1910),
further development 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Spain 2.2.1. Official
legislation: Public instruction and Commercial Studies 2.2.2. Authors and
their manuals: underlying foreign language methods 2.2.3. Institutions and
private academies 2.2.4. Theoretical works on ELT in Spain 2.3. Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970 3.1. Introduction 3.2. The
new actors in ELT: Britain and the USA 3.2.1. Harold Edward Palmer 3.2.2.
Albert Sydney Hornby 3.2.3. Michael Philip West 3.2.4. Charles Carpenter
Fries 3.3. Europe and Spain in the 1950s and 1960s: so close and so far
away 3.4. The Spanish tradition 3.4.1. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970:
Official legislation 3.5. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970: The private
sector 3.5.1. Private academies 3.6. Overview of English manuals in Spain
between 1910 and 1970 3.7. Teaching English beyond manuals: the exceptional
cases of Juan Carrión and Patricia Shaw Fairman 3.7.1. Juan Carrión and The
Beatles 3.7.2. English through the theatre 3.8. Conclusion, Bibliography,
Appendix I, Appendix II, Index.
teaching 2. Approaches 3. Publications on the historiography of foreign
language teaching in Spain 4. The historiography of English language
teaching in Spain: A retrospective 5. Methodology of the present work
CHAPTER 1: The inception of ELT in Spain (1769-1850) 1.1. Political and
socio-cultural framework 1.2. The socio-cultural context 1.3. European
foreign language teaching framework 1.4. The origins of ELT in Spain: where
and how 1.4.1. Where was English taught between 1769 and 1850? 1.4.2. How
was English taught? 1.5. Conclusion CHAPTER 2: ELT in Spain (1850-1910),
further development 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Spain 2.2.1. Official
legislation: Public instruction and Commercial Studies 2.2.2. Authors and
their manuals: underlying foreign language methods 2.2.3. Institutions and
private academies 2.2.4. Theoretical works on ELT in Spain 2.3. Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970 3.1. Introduction 3.2. The
new actors in ELT: Britain and the USA 3.2.1. Harold Edward Palmer 3.2.2.
Albert Sydney Hornby 3.2.3. Michael Philip West 3.2.4. Charles Carpenter
Fries 3.3. Europe and Spain in the 1950s and 1960s: so close and so far
away 3.4. The Spanish tradition 3.4.1. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970:
Official legislation 3.5. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970: The private
sector 3.5.1. Private academies 3.6. Overview of English manuals in Spain
between 1910 and 1970 3.7. Teaching English beyond manuals: the exceptional
cases of Juan Carrión and Patricia Shaw Fairman 3.7.1. Juan Carrión and The
Beatles 3.7.2. English through the theatre 3.8. Conclusion, Bibliography,
Appendix I, Appendix II, Index.
Introduction 1. The significance of the historiography of foreign language
teaching 2. Approaches 3. Publications on the historiography of foreign
language teaching in Spain 4. The historiography of English language
teaching in Spain: A retrospective 5. Methodology of the present work
CHAPTER 1: The inception of ELT in Spain (1769-1850) 1.1. Political and
socio-cultural framework 1.2. The socio-cultural context 1.3. European
foreign language teaching framework 1.4. The origins of ELT in Spain: where
and how 1.4.1. Where was English taught between 1769 and 1850? 1.4.2. How
was English taught? 1.5. Conclusion CHAPTER 2: ELT in Spain (1850-1910),
further development 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Spain 2.2.1. Official
legislation: Public instruction and Commercial Studies 2.2.2. Authors and
their manuals: underlying foreign language methods 2.2.3. Institutions and
private academies 2.2.4. Theoretical works on ELT in Spain 2.3. Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970 3.1. Introduction 3.2. The
new actors in ELT: Britain and the USA 3.2.1. Harold Edward Palmer 3.2.2.
Albert Sydney Hornby 3.2.3. Michael Philip West 3.2.4. Charles Carpenter
Fries 3.3. Europe and Spain in the 1950s and 1960s: so close and so far
away 3.4. The Spanish tradition 3.4.1. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970:
Official legislation 3.5. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970: The private
sector 3.5.1. Private academies 3.6. Overview of English manuals in Spain
between 1910 and 1970 3.7. Teaching English beyond manuals: the exceptional
cases of Juan Carrión and Patricia Shaw Fairman 3.7.1. Juan Carrión and The
Beatles 3.7.2. English through the theatre 3.8. Conclusion, Bibliography,
Appendix I, Appendix II, Index.
teaching 2. Approaches 3. Publications on the historiography of foreign
language teaching in Spain 4. The historiography of English language
teaching in Spain: A retrospective 5. Methodology of the present work
CHAPTER 1: The inception of ELT in Spain (1769-1850) 1.1. Political and
socio-cultural framework 1.2. The socio-cultural context 1.3. European
foreign language teaching framework 1.4. The origins of ELT in Spain: where
and how 1.4.1. Where was English taught between 1769 and 1850? 1.4.2. How
was English taught? 1.5. Conclusion CHAPTER 2: ELT in Spain (1850-1910),
further development 2.1. Introduction 2.2. Spain 2.2.1. Official
legislation: Public instruction and Commercial Studies 2.2.2. Authors and
their manuals: underlying foreign language methods 2.2.3. Institutions and
private academies 2.2.4. Theoretical works on ELT in Spain 2.3. Conclusion
CHAPTER 3: ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970 3.1. Introduction 3.2. The
new actors in ELT: Britain and the USA 3.2.1. Harold Edward Palmer 3.2.2.
Albert Sydney Hornby 3.2.3. Michael Philip West 3.2.4. Charles Carpenter
Fries 3.3. Europe and Spain in the 1950s and 1960s: so close and so far
away 3.4. The Spanish tradition 3.4.1. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970:
Official legislation 3.5. ELT in Spain between 1910 and 1970: The private
sector 3.5.1. Private academies 3.6. Overview of English manuals in Spain
between 1910 and 1970 3.7. Teaching English beyond manuals: the exceptional
cases of Juan Carrión and Patricia Shaw Fairman 3.7.1. Juan Carrión and The
Beatles 3.7.2. English through the theatre 3.8. Conclusion, Bibliography,
Appendix I, Appendix II, Index.







