Something I've always felt would deepen our conversations if we considered this in our day to day.
seen from Türkiye
seen from Argentina
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Venezuela
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seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
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seen from South Africa
seen from Saudi Arabia

seen from United States
seen from Argentina
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
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Something I've always felt would deepen our conversations if we considered this in our day to day.
A Transdisciplinary Framework for SLA in a Multilingual World [Journal Article Review]
I found this to be a fascinating paper, in both the content, and the context in which it was written.
I love that so many SLA researchers contributed, and embodied the kind of interdisciplinary and collaborative approach that they advocated for.
I thought it was actually a good overview of the field of Second Language Acquisition in general, in that different influences and considerations in SLA were explored. I particularly enjoyed discussions of emotion and identity, and the idea of continuity from first language acquisition mechanisms into additional languages acquisition, such as mediation by attention and social interaction.
I appreciated the acknowledgment of macro level features of influence such as language ideologies, which may either promote of constrain learning. Particularly with regard to socioeconomic access and opportunity, and capital.
I liked revisiting also the concepts of imagined and real communities of practice,and the learner's self-perception of competency being a strong mediating factor in their successful use of language. The way the paper was structured into themes was quite good. It gave me a lot of food for thought.
I wonder why this was chosen as a text for meso level evaluation though [the topic of study for Week 5]. It does present a diagram of micro, meso and macro level influences, with meso being institutions, but I am not sure if this is directly applicable or relevant to evaluation.
Nonetheless, it is one of my favourite reads in the course thus far.
The Douglas Fir Group. (2016). A Transdisciplinary Framework for SLA in a Multilingual World. The Modern Language Journal, 100, 19-47. doi:10.1111/modl.12301