Recommended to those who are interested in the current status or the background of multilingual education in the Asian context.

Discourse Studies

Explores multilingual education from a number of different perspectives and in a range of different Asian contexts. Its treatment of the roles identity and motivation play in the development of individual multilingualism is of particular significance. Anyone with an interest in multilingualism and multilingual education will not only enjoy but also benefit from reading this book.

Andy Kirkpatrick, Professor, Griffith University, Australia

A must-read for researchers in the areas of multilingualism and multilingual education, this book – comprised of both primary and secondary research – explores motivational change and identity development in L2 and L3 learning and teaching for different Asian contexts.

Barry Lee Reynolds, Assistant Professor of English Education, University of Macau, China

This book investigates how learners’ motivations and identities are constructed in the process of learning and using multiple languages in Asian contexts. It presents examples of multilingual contexts in different parts of Asia and illustrates various achievements and challenges associated with multilingual education. Drawing on recent theoretical developments regarding learners’ motivations and identities in language learning-related research, this book uncovers learners’ motivations that underlie their decisions of learning multiple languages in Asian contexts.

Through empirical studies, the authors offer conceptual interpretations on emerging concepts such as dual-motivation system, motivation dynamics, motivational transformation episodes, and hierarchies of identities. In addition to being highly relevant to researchers of applied linguistics, this book is a valuable reference for every university and college library that serves a faculty or school of education.

Les mer

Preface
Introduction: Multilingual Education in Asian contexts
1. Imagined Communities, Motivation, and Multilingual Education in Asia
2. English as a Lingua Franca, Multilingual Identity, and Multilingual Education in Asia
3. Language Learning, Motivation, and Identity in Asian Multilingual Learning Context
4. Multilingual Education in Hong Kong: Motivation and Identity
5. Motivation and Identity of the Stakeholders: The Case of Hong Kong
6. The Dynamics of L2 and L3 Learning, Identity Development, and Motivation Change: A Hong Kong Learner Perspective
7. Identities, Imagined Communities, and Communities of Practice: Thai Students in China
8. L2 and L3 learning, Motivation and Identity: A Chinese EFL Learner’s Reflection
Conclusion: Future directions for Multilingual Education in Asian Contexts
References
Index

Les mer
Explores and analyses how learners’ motivations and identities are constructed in the process of learning multiple languages in Chinese-speaking contexts in Asia.
Synthesises recent theoretical developments concerning motivation and identity in language-related research

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350192508
Publisert
2021-07-29
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
277 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
192

Biografisk notat

Mark Feng Teng is a language teacher educator with extensive teaching and research experience in China.

Wang Lixun is Associate Professor in the Department of Linguistics and Modern Language Studies at the Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong.