This overview of six years of research on language learning and teaching in Austria covers a period of dynamic development in the field. While all the studies reviewed here illustrate research driven by a combination of local and global concerns and theoretical frameworks, some specific clusters of research interest emerge. The first of these focuses on issues connected with multilingualism in present-day society in terms of language policy, theory development and, importantly, the critical scrutiny of dominant discursive practices in connection with minority and migrant languages. In combination with this focus, there is a concern with German as a second or foreign language in a number of contexts. A second cluster concerns the area of language testing and assessment, which has gained political import due to changes in national education policy and the introduction of standardized tests. Finally, a third cluster of research concerns the diverse types of specialized language instruction, including the introduction of foreign language instruction from age six onwards, the rise of academic writing instruction, English-medium education and, as a final more general issue, the role of English as a dominant language in the canon of all foreign and second languages in Austria.
Schreiben, als vierte Fertigkeit im Fremdsprachenunterricht seit je her als Stiefkind behandelt (vgl. Bohn, 1987)-wenn mal davon abgesehen wird, daß es als Hilfsmittel unverzichtbar im Mittelpunkt stehen muß-spielte auch bis vor kurzem innerhalb der Fremdsprachenforschung und-didaktik eine untergeordnete Rolle. Um so begrüßenswerter erscheinen mir Studien wie die vorliegende, die einerseits auf dieses Defizit aufmerksam macht und andererseits auf deren Behebung abzielt.
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