Understanding Advanced Second-Language Reading
- Add to cart
- Price:
$44.95$40.46 - Paperback: 218 pages
- Also available in Hardback and e-Book
- Published: July 2010
- ISBN: 978-0-415-87910-1
- Publisher: Routledge
Sharing & Social Bookmarking:
Question about this product?
- By Elizabeth Bernhardt.
What distinguishes this book is its broad, yet thorough, view of theory, process, and research on adult second-language reading. Offering extensive discussions of upper-register second-language texts (both expository and narrative) that adult second-language readers encounter daily across the globe, it also presents an assessment schema for second-language text comprehension as well as for the assessment of teaching.
Understanding Advanced Second-Language Reading:
- Includes languages other than English in the discussion of second language reading
- Is firmly anchored in a theory of second language reading - the concept of compensatory processing
- Emphasizes the multi-dimensionality and dynamic nature of L2 reading development
- Focuses on comprehension of upper-register literary texts
- Balances theory and instructional practices
Filling the need for a coherent, theoretically consistent, and research-based portrait of how literate adolescents and adults comprehend, and learn to comprehend, at greater levels of sophistication and whether that ability can be enhanced by instruction, this is a must-have resource for reading and second-language researchers, students, and teachers.
Table of Contents
Preface
1. Exploring the Complexities of Second-language Reading
2. A Compensatory Theory of Second-language Reading
3. Sketching the Landscape of Second-language Reading Research
4. Compensatory Theory in Second-language Reading Instruction
5. Second-language Readers and Literary Text
6. Assessing the Learning and Teaching of Comprehension in a Second Language
7. Continuing to Research Second-language Reading
Works Cited
Author Biography
Elizabeth B. Bernhardt is Professor, German Studies; John Roberts Hale Director of the Language Center; and The W. Warren Shelden University Fellow in Undergraduate Education at Stanford University, US.