PIPPIN PUBLISHING

AND THEN THERE WERE TWO: CHILDREN AND SECOND - LANGUAGE LEARNING

ISBN: 0-88751-100-7    View Graphical Site    Go Back


Descript:
How do children learning English as a second language become bilingual?

How do children's individual learning styles affect the task of learning English? Particularly when they have special needs?

What strategies do children adopt as they go about learning English?

What role does children's native language play in the process of learning English?

How can schools design and adapt programs to meet the needs of ESL students?

In this new revised and expanded edition of And Then There Were Two, Terry Piper answers these questions - and more. Her practical insights into the language-learning process have made this book a popular resource that provides invaluable encouragement and guidance for parents, classroom teachers who wish to know more about second-language learning, and experienced ESL teachers alike.

Audience: For practicing teachers, as well as teachers in training, this book offers a brief and lively introduction to a subject of wide concern today.

Paperback  6" x 9"


Table of contents:
Preface

Children’s Second-Language Learning
  Home Bilingualism
  School Bilingualism

Learning Styles and Strategies
  Learning Styles
  Learning Strategies

Languages They Know and the Language They Learn
  English and the Languages They Know
  Summary of Differences
  Language Transfer

Helping ESL Children with Special Needs
  Communicative Disorders
  Semilingualism

Planning Programs
  ESL Programs
  Selecting Programs
  A Final Word

Bibliography


Review:

"The author presents vital concepts that support the practitioner in making informed instructional decisions."
-- Mark Gura in Educational Leadership

"... a remarkable little book. It manages to provide a broad range of conceptual tools from various disciplines to teachers of children with limited English proficiency, and does that in a straightforward way, using little jargon and much common sense."
-- Robert DeKeyser in Language