2021
DOI: 10.1111/modl.12691
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Empirically Defining Language Learning and Teaching Materials in Use Through Sociomaterial Perspectives

Abstract: Language learning and teaching (LLT) materials—like teacher‐created handouts, textbooks, and overhead transparencies—are central elements of language classrooms worldwide. Nonetheless, how language students and teachers actually engage with and deploy LLT materials has rarely been the focus of research. In response, this issue offers the first compilation of classroom‐based studies of ‘materials use’ in language education and includes research on Ojibwe, Japanese, French, and English language pedagogy. In this… Show more

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Cited by 60 publications
(75 citation statements)
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“…Both the Kim & Canagarajah (2021, this issue) and the Alhajimohammed (2020) studies also remind us of how materials use is mediated by the wider context, in line with the emphasis by Guerrettaz et al. (2021, this issue) on the importance of studying the wider environment in research on materials use. Relevant contextual factors when researching materials use can include technology and people available for learners to consult in class (e.g., the internet, the teacher, other learners) but also the extra‐classroom environment.…”
Section: Theme 2: the Study Of Student‐generated Materialsmentioning
confidence: 68%
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“…Both the Kim & Canagarajah (2021, this issue) and the Alhajimohammed (2020) studies also remind us of how materials use is mediated by the wider context, in line with the emphasis by Guerrettaz et al. (2021, this issue) on the importance of studying the wider environment in research on materials use. Relevant contextual factors when researching materials use can include technology and people available for learners to consult in class (e.g., the internet, the teacher, other learners) but also the extra‐classroom environment.…”
Section: Theme 2: the Study Of Student‐generated Materialsmentioning
confidence: 68%
“…I have emphasized throughout my discussion that, as Guerrettaz (2021, this issue) and Guerrettaz et al. (2021, this issue) claim, there is clearly a need for more research on materials use. Teaching materials printed on the textbook page, on the teacher‐produced handout, or that are part of the wider environment (like Engman & Hermes's [2021, this issue] ‘materials’ found in the woods) only truly become pedagogic artifacts and affordances when in use; without enactment by teacher and learners, their potential strengths and weaknesses lie dormant, unrealized.…”
Section: Conclusion: There Is More To Materials Research Than Studies Of Use or Consumptionmentioning
confidence: 91%
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