Understanding Second Language Acquisition (2nd ed)

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Understanding Second Language Acquisition (2nd ed) Page 55

by Rod Ellis


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  Index

  A

  B

  C

  D

  E

  F

  G

  H

  I

  J

  K

  L

  M

  N

  O

  P

  Q

  R

  S

  T

  U

  V

  W

  X

  Y

  Z

  (Page numbers annotated with ‘t’, ‘f’, ‘n’, or ‘g’ refer to tables, figures, notes, or glossary entries respectively.)

  A

  Abdullah, K.129

  Abrahamsson, N.31

  85

  95n6

  abstract schema177–8

  accessibility173t

  Acculturation Model19

  206–8

  207t

  313g

  accuracy14

  269t

  313g

  accuracy order64

  74

  313g

  Achiba, M.89–90

  Adams, R. et al.161

  Adaptive Control of Thought (ACT) Model17

  174

  178

  304

  313g

  additional language acquisition24n2

  211

  239n1

  affective factors37

  38t

  271

  age of learner25–6

  Critical Period Hypothesis (CPH)26–31

  educational policy34–5

  and L1 transfer133–4

  137t

  and psychological factors42

  59

  and rate of acquisition32–3

  and route of L2 acquisition33–4

  36n3

  and ultimate attainment26–32

  summary35–6

  300–1

  agency23

  48

  195

  208

  229

  232

  236

  Akakura, M.245

  247t

  248

  alertness183

  186

  alignment222–3

  Aljaafreh, A.217

  218t

  Allwright, R.302

  Alvarez, E.34

  Al
zheimer’s Disease199

  amnesia176

  AMTB (Attitude Motivation Test Battery)47–8

  Andersen, R.104

  132–3

  186

  Anderson, J.17

  174

  175

  178

  304

  aphasia176

  199

  Armstrong, N.99

  Arthur, B. et al.147

  148

  articulation269–70

  Ashby, W.99

  Asher, J.251

  aspect acquisition78–9

  Aspect Hypothesis104

  313g

  Aston, G.53

  Atkinson, D. et al.205

  213

  222–3

  239n1

  attention14–15

  181

  313g

  affecting factors186–7

  detection184–5

  executive control185–6

  key characteristics181

  182t

  learned selective attention180

  neurobiological studies199

  Schmidt’s Noticing Hypothesis182–3

  Tomlin and Villa’s Theory of Attention183–4

  summary188–9

  Attitude Motivation Test Battery (AMTB)47–8

  attractor states22

  110

  196

  313g

  Attribution Theory50

  313g

  Aubrey, S.159

  Audiolingual Method243

  257–8

  313g

  avoidance11

  119

  129

  270

  313g

  awareness173

  182

  267

  B

  Baddeley, A.45

  Bailey, K.56

  Bailey, N. et al.74

  Barcelona Age Factor Project35

  Bardovi-Harlig, K.78–9

  90–1

  308

  Barkhuizen, G.65

  basic variety71

  72t

  196

  313g

  Batstone, R.222

  Bayley, R.97

  100

  102

  103

  Beckner, C. et al.194–5

  197

  Beebe, L.130

  behaviourist learning theory28

  117

  118

  244t

  257

  313–14g

  Bell, H.87

  Benati, A.255

  Berdan, R.115n4

  bi/multilingualism6

  24n3

  140

  and aphasia199

  co-ordinate bilingualism179–80

  compound bilingualism180

  simultaneous bilingual acquisition24n1

  Bialystok, E.28–9

  36n1

  Bickerton, D.105

  107–8

  Birdsong, D.29

  31

  311n2

  Bley-Vroman, R.64

  281

  Block, D.19

  205

  211

  231

  237

  239n1

  304

  blocking180–1

  186

  323

  Bongaerts, T.29

  31

  Bongartz, C.234

  Bowen, J.141n2

  Brown, R.8

  74

  Burden, R.50

  Burt, M.74

  117–18

  Bygate, M.274

  282

  Bylund, E. et al.119–20

  121

  C

  CA see conversation analysis

  Cadierno, T.255

  CAF see complexity, accuracy, and fluency

  Callies, M.124

  126

  Cameron, L.194

  202

  Cancino, H. et al.33

  36n3

  79

  97

  108–9

  111

  115n4

  207

  careful style10

  98

  314g

  Carroll, J.39–41

  40t

  41

  central executive45

  185

  CF see confirmation checks

  Chamot, A.57

  Chaudron, C.148

  Chomsky, N.6

  22

  27

  72

  175

  203n3

  chunking41

  65

  174–5

  185–6

  clarification requests150t

  162

  Clement, R.48–9

  co-construction215

  Cochrane, R.33

  Cognition Hypothesis270–1

  279

  314g

  cognitive comparison160

  185

  260

  314g

  cognitive factors37

  38t

  271

  cognitive psychology171

  cognitive SLA171

  attention181–9

  cognitive theories189–95

  critiques of205

  209–11

  paradigms171–2

  representation of L2 knowledge172–81

  research198–200

  responses to critique211

  vs social SLA209–11

  212–13

  212t

  conclusion200–2

  304–5

  cognitive strategies57

  Cole, K.233

  collaborative dialogue219–20

  239n3

  collaborative learning234

  communication strategies138

  270

  314g

  communication: willingness to communicate38t

  communicative competence66–7

  211

  314g

  communities of practice227

  232–3

  314g

  comparative fallacy64

  294

  314g

  competence6

  99

  176

  314g see also communicative competence; discourse competence; grammatical competence; interactional competence; linguistic competence; multicompetence; pragmalinguistic competence; sociolinguistic competence; sociopragmatic competence; strategic competence

  Competition Model195

  314g

  Complex Adaptive Systems Theory177

  194–5

  314g

  adaptable systems195–6

  unstable systems196–8

  complexity269t

  296–7

  314g

  complexity, accuracy, and fluency (CAF)269

  269t

  273

  284

  Complexity Theory22–3

  110

  194–5

  314g

  comprehensible input12

  14

  148

 

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