Firth2007

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Firth2007
BibType ARTICLE
Key Firth2007
Author(s) Alan Firth, Johannes Wagner
Title Second/foreign language learning as a social accomplishment: elaborations on a reconceptualized SLA
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Second language acquisition
Publisher
Year 2007
Language
City
Month
Journal Modern Language Journal
Volume 91
Number S1
Pages 800–818
URL Link
DOI 10.1111/j.1540-4781.2007.00670.x
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

In this article, we begin by delineating the background to and motivations behind Firth and Wagner (1997), wherein we called for a reconceptualization of second language acquisition (SLA) research. We then outline and comment upon some of our critics' reactions to the article. Next we review and discuss the conceptual, theoretical, and methodological impact the article has had on the SLA field. Thereafter, we reengage and develop some of the themes raised but left undeveloped in the 1997 article. These themes cluster around the notions of and interrelationships between language use, language learning, and language acquisition. Although we devote space to forwarding the position that the dichotomy of language use and acquisition cannot defensibly be maintained (and in this we take up a contrary position to that held in mainstream SLA), our treatment of the issues is essentially methodological. We focus on describing a variety of aspects of learning-in-action, captured in transcripts of recordings of naturally occurring foreign, second, or other language interactions. Through transcript analyses, we explore the possibilities of describing learning-in-action devoid of cognitivistic notions of language and learning. In so doing, we advance moves to formulate and establish a reconceptualized SLA.

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