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geaaronson
Joined: 19 Apr 2005 Posts: 948 Location: Mexico City
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Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2012 2:21 am Post subject: reading enrichment programs |
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I hope someone out there can help me.
I am looking for scholarly abstracts/articles on education, with a special emphasis on reading enrichment programs. Searching the internet for such information I am learning two things.
1) The free information on this subject is mostly too simplified and useless.
2) The more academic are locked up in either paid subscriptions to a scholarly service or you must be able to access through your university. Mine, here, is not linked. Nor would I believe I could access it through my former US university as everyone I knew there has left. No contacts left.
Can someone out there help me in finding scholarly treatises on such material free of charge, and of deep research. I am not talking about the promo pieces the various publishers put on the web, but independent articles by educational researchers?
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Glenski
Joined: 15 Jan 2003 Posts: 12844 Location: Hokkaido, JAPAN
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Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2012 5:18 am Post subject: |
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"articles on education"
Sorry, far too general a topic.
"reading enrichment"
Can you be more specific?
Use Google Scholar for access to any of the free publications. Otherwise, join an educational organization for their pubs, or pay a subscription to the journals you think you would like to read from the most. |
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mmcmorrow
Joined: 30 Sep 2007 Posts: 143 Location: New Zealand
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Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2012 9:51 pm Post subject: |
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These two free online refereed journals have got various research articles on extensive reading:
The Reading Matrix Journal
Reading in a Foreign Language
Perhaps you already know that you can get discounted access to a range of journals as a member of TESOL or IATEFL - and there are also useful discussion forums etc and other resources on their sites, so that could also be an option.
The English Language Teaching Journal (a paid subscription journal associated with IATEFL) has just published an interesting special issue of review articles of developments in various areas since 1995. In an article on skills, Amos Paran from London's Institute of Education comments that:
"Our view of intensive reading does not seem to have changed greatly; what does seem to have changed is a rebalancing of reading focuses, with a fairly steady (though admittedly fairly slow as well) move from intensive reading to extensive reading" (p. 455). He also talks about the comeback of literature as a source of reading practice.
Martin McMorrow, Massey University, New Zealand
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Paran, A. (2012). Language skills: questions for teaching and learning. English Language Teaching Journal 66(4), 450-458. |
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MsBlackcurrant
Joined: 22 Aug 2012 Posts: 77
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Posted: Mon Nov 12, 2012 12:01 pm Post subject: |
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I'm interested in the use of literature in TEFL. It seems that the subject is tackled in a few online journals and individual articles in the pdf format.
Sooner or later you'd have to find an academic library, because otherwise you'd never be able to consult the references listed in any of these articles. |
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