--- Forwarded Message from Nina Garrett <[log in to unmask]> --- >Date: Mon, 07 Jan 2002 11:39:28 -0500 >To: Language Learning and Technology International Information Forum <[log in to unmask]> >From: Nina Garrett <[log in to unmask]> >Subject: AAUSC 2003 -- call for papers >In-Reply-To: <[log in to unmask]> Dear LLTI subscribers - This has been posted to a number of FL teaching lists, and it occurred to me that it would be great to have a chapter in this volume on the role of technology in enabling the offering of advanced-level language courses. Anyone out there interested in submitting a paper? See below -- please don't reply to me (Nina). AAUSC VOLUME 2003: Issues in Language Program Direction Advanced Foreign Language Learning: A Challenge to College Programs Call for Papers Papers are sought for the American Association of University Supervisors and Coordinators' 2003 volume on Issues in Language Program Direction. Entitled Advanced Foreign Language Learning: A Challenge to College Programs, this collection explores the possibilities and challenges for collegiate foreign language departments as they support advanced L2 learning. Central to the volume is the notion that fostering advanced language learning requires program-wide thinking that spans the typical four-year undergraduate program and the possibility for continuation in graduate education. Because of their expertise in the field and their inherent investment in programmatic issues, supervisors and coordinators, can and should play a pivotal role in shaping this discussion. An investigation into advanced language acquisition raises important questions about possible limitations placed on advanced language learning by the structural and content bifurcation in collegiate foreign language departments and also by prevailing characterizations of the advanced learner. Specifically, addressing advanced language instruction entails linking content and language learning and the consequences of that linkage, in terms of structures, courses, materials, and pedagogies. This volume wishes to foster an explicit focus on these and related issues. Topics that might be addressed include: -- "The curriculum," as contrasted with a series of courses or as two separate and unequal portions (e.g., the language program, the content courses) as a way of enhancing balanced interlanguage development toward advanced abilities over the four years of study; -- quality criteria for "language teaching " in the post-methods condition that recognizes that foreign language learning is a staged long-range process, that must have, at the very least, have a conceptual trajectory toward advanced abilities if it is at all to achieve them; -- the challenge of fostering the existing capacities of heritage speakers; -- the quality of study abroad programs, and their relationship to campus programs; -- the increasingly frequent shift back-and-forth between instructed and naturalistic foreign language learning, e.g., through internships, engagement with diverse communities that use the language, the world of work; -- a program's need to "assure" that its graduates can handle the sophisticated language use that characterizes academic work in graduate departments. -- a reconsideration of what is involved in "language acquisition" in academic settings, as contrasted with proprietary and professional settings. For expressions of interest and questions about the volume, please contact the editors at your earliest convenience. Submission deadline for papers (4 copies): September 1, 2002. See style sheet (Modified Chicago B) in recent issues of the AAUSC series. Heidi Byrnes and Hiram Maxim German Department Georgetown University Washington, D.C. 20057 Tel: (202) 687-6051; Fax: (202) 687-7568 E-mail: [log in to unmask] or [log in to unmask]