Paul Kei Matsuda
http://pmatsuda.faculty.asu.edu/

Journal of Writing Research: John R. Hayes award

John R. Hayes award

We are pleased to announce the establishment of the John R. Hayes Award for excellence in writing research. This award, aimed at recognizing outstanding quantitative or qualitative empirical research in writing, will be awarded biennial to an author or authors of an article published in the Journal of Writing Research.

The award is generously funded by John R. Hayes himself. Professor Hayes (Carnegie Mellon, Pittsburgh) is one of the most influential writing researchers since 1980. He has been a pioneer in introducing cognitive psychology in writing research. There is hardly one article on writing processes that does not cite one of his publications.

The winner of the John R. Hayes Award will be selected by a committee appointed and chaired by a representation of the editors, in 2010 by Luuk Van Waes and Gert Rijlaarsdam. Articles will be evaluated for quality of empirical scholarship. Winners will be announced in the journal and recognized at the biennial Earli SIG Writing Conference in Heibelberg 2010. Recipients of the award will receive a custom-designed object and $ 1000.

We encourage you or your students to submit to JoWR to be part of the eligible pool for the 2010 award. All articles published before August 2010 will be eligible for the first award.

 

 

CFP: Canadian Modern Language Review

CALL FOR PROPOSALS
The Canadian Modern Language Review
SPECIAL ISSUE 2012

The Editors of the Canadian Modern Language Review invite proposals for the annual special issue of the journal. Proposals should identify a contemporary topic which will allow for the exploration of recent advances in theory, research, and practice in second language learning and teaching. The proposed topic should also be one that will attract diverse perspectives, research methodologies, and pedagogical applications.
 
The special issue of the CMLR is an open call for papers; guest editors therefore manage the submissions, following the standard double blind review process. At least one of the editors should be fluent in both English and French.
 
Proposals will be evaluated by the CMLR Editors and members of the Editorial Board. The criteria will include: relevance to the mandate of the journal; significance of the topic to the field; and the qualifications of the two editors. The successful proposal will be announced in the spring of 2010.
 
Guest editors should refer to the Guidelines for Special Issue Proposals on the CMLR website for the details of the submission requirements.
http://www.utpjournals.com/cmlr/cmlr.html

Due date for proposals: January 5, 2010


APPEL À PROPOSITIONS DE THÈMES
La Revue canadienne des langues vivantes
NUMÉRO SPÉCIAL - 2012
 
Les rédacteurs de la Revue canadienne des langues vivantes invitent les personnes intéressées à proposer des thèmes pour le numéro spécial annuel de la revue. Chaque proposition devra porter sur un sujet contemporain ouvrant sur l’exploration des progrès récents en matière de théorie, de recherche et de pratiques en apprentissage et en enseignement des langues secondes. Le thème proposé devra également susciter des contributions sur des perspectives, des méthodes de recherche et des applications pédagogiques variées.
 
Pour ce numéro spécial de la RCLV, il y aura un appel général à contributions. Les rédacteurs invités auront donc à gérer les articles soumis au moyen du processus habituel d’évaluation à double insu. Au moins un des rédacteurs devra s’exprimer couramment en anglais et en français.
 
Les propositions seront évaluées par les rédacteurs de la RCLV et les membres du conseil d’administration, selon les critères suivants
: la pertinence du thème relativement au mandat de la revue, l’importance du sujet dans le champ d’études et les qualifications des deux rédacteurs. La proposition retenue sera dévoilée au printemps 2010.
 
Pour tout renseignement concernant les exigences de soumission, les rédacteurs invités devront se référer aux Directives sur la proposition de thèmes pour le numéro spécial, disponible sur le site web de la RCLV.

http://www.utpjournals.com/cmlr/cmlr.html

Date limite d’envoi des propositions : le 5 janvier 2010


 
The Canadian Modern Language Review/La Revue canadienne des langues vivantes
During the more than 60 years of its existence, The Canadian Modern Language Review/La Revue canadienne des langues vivantes has evolved from an Ontario-centered journal containing mainly classroom-based teaching strategies and resources to a Canada-wide, bilingual, refereed scholarly publication of national scope and international repute. The CMLR/RCLV serves members of the teaching profession, administrators and researchers interested in all levels of English and French as second languages and, in addition, those interested in native and other modern, international, or heritage language programs and issues.
 
For more information about CMLR/ RCLV (in print or online) or for submissions information, please contact
University of Toronto Press — Journals Division
5201 Dufferin St., Toronto, ON,
 Canada M3H 5T8
tel: (416) 667-7810 fax: (416) 667-7881
Fax Toll Free in North America 1-800-221-9985
email: journals@utpress.utoronto.ca <mailto:journals@utpress.utoronto.ca?subject=cmlr>
www.utpjournals.com/cmlr <http://www.utpjournals.com/cmlr>

UTP Journals on Facebook www.facebook.com/utpjournals <www.facebook.com/utpjournals>  
Join us for advance notice of tables of contents of forthcoming issues, author and editor commentaries and insights, calls for papers and advice on publishing in our journals. Become a fan and receive free access to articles weekly through UTPJournals focus.

Posted by T Hawkins, UTP Journals

CFP: Arizona Working Papers

Call for submissions in Arizona Working Papers:

The Arizona Working Papers is inviting students and faculty from SLAT,
SLAT's collaborating departments, and TESL/Applied Linguistics Programs from
other universities to submit papers to the Arizona Working Papers (AWP), 2010,
Volume 17. Papers must be research studies and should focus on issues related
to second language acquisition and teaching including the four specialization
areas in SLAT (L2 Pedagogy and Program Administration, L2 Use, L2 Processes,
and L2 Analysis) or a cross-disciplinary topic. First language studies with
relevance to second language acquisition and teaching may also be submitted.
Submissions are accepted in English and other widely spoken languages (Spanish,
French, Italian, German, Russian, etc).

Submission Deadline: January 15, 2010

Please follow this link for more details: http://w3.coh.arizona.edu/awp/

We look forward to hearing from you!

AWP Co-editors,
University of Arizona

FW: Reminder and Correction: Blog-friendly: APL Speaker Series, Two In One, Monday 12/14/09

The Applied Linguistics Speakers Series Announces

A Special Two-Person, One Day Event:

 

Mary Hamilton & David Barton

  

At 2:00 PM, hear from Mary Hamilton:  

 

How Does the Global Get Into the Local?:

 Literacy Policy, Complexity and the Politics of Representation

 

How do representations of literacy and literacy learners bridge current discourses of globalization with local educational practice? In this session, Hamilton will explore this topic using examples from an historical policy study that has traced the reshaping of the field of adult literacy since the 1970s. She will complement these examples with contemporary data exploring the effects of performance indicators in UK educational institutions. Theoretical tools from literacy studies and from science and technology studies are used in the analysis, revealing both continuities and differences in the construction of adults as citizens and learners across different policy periods.

 

Mary Hamilton is Professor of Adult Learning and Literacy in the Department of Educational Research at Lancaster University; Associate Director of the Lancaster Literacy Research Centre and a founder member of the Research and Practice in Adult Literacy group. Her current research is in literacy policy and governance, Actor Network Theory, practitioner enquiry, academic literacies and change. Her co-authored publications include Local Literacies (with David Barton);  Powerful Literacies (with Jim Crowther and Lynn Tett) and Changing Faces of Adult Literacy, Language and Numeracy: A Critical History of Policy and Practice (with Yvonne Hillier).

 

At 3:30 PM, hear from David Barton:  

 

How People Develop New Vernacular Literacy Practices on

 the Web Through Participation and Deliberate Learning

 

People’s everyday literacy practices or ‘local literacies’ have been researched extensively in physical settings,  revealing the dynamics of this vernacular world of voluntary, self-generated writing which is learned informally, circulated locally and not regulated by the institutional strictures of education or the workplace. This paper turns to the internet and examines the ‘ordinary’ writing which people do in Web 2.0 spaces, reporting on the writing done on the photo-sharing website Flickr. This is based on detailed examination of photo sites complemented by online interviews with multilingual Flickr users. The paper focuses on what people say about their learning of new practices on the internet. It also addresses issues of language choice online and the need to redefine the concepts of ‘local’ and ‘vernacular’. The paper shows how people learn to create new global identities as they participate in a multilingual, multi-modal online space, combining languages in new ways and making the internet their own.

 

David Barton is Professor of Language and Literacy in the Department of Linguistics at Lancaster University and Director of the Lancaster Literacy Research Centre. He is also Visiting Professor II at the University of Stavanger, Norway. Recent publications, with others, include The anthropology of writing, Continuum, 2010; Literacy, Lives and Learning, Routledge, 2007; Improving learning in college, Routledge 2009. He is also editor of the Routledge Literacies book series.

 

Date: Monday, 12.14.2009                     

Time: 2:00-4:30 P.M., with 30 minutes of refreshments and Q&A

Location:  Payne 129

For more information, contact karen.lillie@asu.edu or taunalee.bradshaw@asu.edu

For information about the new Applied Linguistics Ph.D. program, visit http://appliedlinguistics.asu.edu

 

 

 

Applied Linguistics Speaker Series

The Applied Linguistics Speakers Series Announces A Special Two-Person, One Day Event:

 

Mary Hamilton & David Barton

  

At 2:00 PM, hear from Mary Hamilton:  

 

How Does the Global Get Into the Local?:  Literacy Policy, Complexity and the Politics of Representation

 

How do representations of literacy and literacy learners bridge current discourses of globalization with local educational practice? In this session, Hamilton will explore this topic using examples from an historical policy study that has traced the reshaping of the field of adult literacy since the 1970s. She will complement these examples with contemporary data exploring the effects of performance indicators in UK educational institutions. Theoretical tools from literacy studies and from science and technology studies are used in the analysis, revealing both continuities and differences in the construction of adults as citizens and learners across different policy periods.

 

Mary Hamilton is Professor of Adult Learning and Literacy in the Department of Educational Research at Lancaster University; Associate Director of the Lancaster Literacy Research Centre and a founder member of the Research and Practice in Adult Literacy group. Her current research is in literacy policy and governance, Actor Network Theory, practitioner enquiry, academic literacies and change. Her co-authored publications include Local Literacies (with David Barton);  Powerful Literacies (with Jim Crowther and Lynn Tett) and Changing Faces of Adult Literacy, Language and Numeracy: A Critical History of Policy and Practice (with Yvonne Hillier).

 

At 3:30 PM, hear from David Barton:  

 

How People Develop New Vernacular Literacy Practices on the Web Through Participation and Deliberate Learning

 

People’s everyday literacy practices or ‘local literacies’ have been researched extensively in physical settings,  revealing the dynamics of this vernacular world of voluntary, self-generated writing which is learned informally, circulated locally and not regulated by the institutional strictures of education or the workplace. This paper turns to the internet and examines the ‘ordinary’ writing which people do in Web 2.0 spaces, reporting on the writing done on the photo-sharing website Flickr. This is based on detailed examination of photo sites complemented by online interviews with multilingual Flickr users. The paper focuses on what people say about their learning of new practices on the internet. It also addresses issues of language choice online and the need to redefine the concepts of ‘local’ and ‘vernacular’. The paper shows how people learn to create new global identities as they participate in a multilingual, multi-modal online space, combining languages in new ways and making the internet their own.

 

David Barton is Professor of Language and Literacy in the Department of Linguistics at Lancaster University and Director of the Lancaster Literacy Research Centre. He is also Visiting Professor II at the University of Stavanger, Norway. Recent publications, with others, include The anthropology of writing, Continuum, 2010; Literacy, Lives and Learning, Routledge, 2007; Improving learning in college, Routledge 2009. He is also editor of the Routledge Literacies book series..

 

Date: Monday, 12.14.2009                     

Time: 2:00-4:30 P.M., with 30 minutes of refreshments and Q&A

Location:  Coor L1-20

 

For more information, contact karen.lillie@asu.edu or taunalee.bradshaw@asu.edu

For information about the new Applied Linguistics Ph.D. program, visit http://appliedlinguistics.asu.edu

 

 

 

 

Last update: January 6, 2008