Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
Introduction, Sahbi Hidri
PART ONE: TESTING, EVALUATION AND ASSESSMENT
Chapter One: Assessing Second Language Proficiency under "Unequal" Perspectives: A Call for Research in the MENA Region, Lee McCallumChapter Two: State-of-the-Art of Assessment in Tunisia: The Case of Testing Listening Comprehension, Sahbi HidriChapter Three: Cultural Content Evaluation of English Language Textbooks (Link Up Series Elementary & Intermediate), Hala Salih Mohamed Nur, Asjad Ahmed Saeed and Abdelkaliq AbboodChapter Four: The Washback Effect of the Thanaweya Amma English Test: Drawbacks and Solutions, Mahmoud Ibrahim
PART TWO: INTERFACES BETWEEN TEACHING AND ASSESSMENT
Chapter Five: A Proposed Metacognitive-Based Approach to Promoting EFL Cohesion and Coherence in Essay Writing of Algerian Master Students, Manal Boudghene Stambouli and Amine BelmekkiChapter Six: More than a Pyramid of Papers: Students' Portfolios and Developmental Language Assessment in the ESL Classroom, Charles EdonmiChapter Seven: The Effectiveness of Pre-assessment to Differentiate the Reading Tasks for the Mixed-Abilities EFL Learners, Syeda Saima Ferheen BukhariChapter Eight: Self-Esteem, Self-Expectancy and Oral Achievement in the Tunisian EFL Context, Marwa Mekni Toujani and Tarek HermessiChapter Nine: Investigating the Quality of Argument Structure in First-Year University Writing, Besma Allagui
PART THREE: ARGUMENTATION IN DISCOURSE ANALYSIS
Chapter Ten: Aspects of Cohesion and Coherence in Moroccan EFL Learners' Written Discourse, Ahmed SahlaneChapter Eleven: Publish or Perish: The Research Letter Genre and Non-Anglophone Scientists' Struggle for Academic Visibility, Mimoun MellitiChapter Twelve: Hedging in Applied Linguistics Theses: An Exploratory Comparative Study, Nourhan SorourChapter Thirteen: Analyzing Argumentative Essay as an Academic Genre on Assessment Framework of IELTS and TOEFL, Zulfiqar Ahmad
PART FOUR: TEACHING DIGLOASSIA AND VOCABULARY
Chapter Fourteen: Including Diglossia in Teaching Arabic as Second Language Programmes: Suggestions and Implications from a Darija Course in Casablanca, Fracesca TabloniChapter Fifteen: Vocabulary Instruction through Patterns of Activity Sequencing Use: Revising the Understanding of Integration in Language Teaching, Ahlam BouiraneChapter Sixteen: Arabic-Speaking Students of EFL, Vocabulary and the Art of Structured Review, Nathaniel Lotze
PART FIVE: ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNING PROBLEMS
Chapter Seventeen: Understanding English Speaking Difficulties: Implications for the English Language Curriculum for the Arab Students in a Pakistani University, Musharraf AzizChapter Eighteen: Domain-Specific and Domain-General Processing Accounts in Children with Specific Language Impairment (SLI): Contribution of Cross Linguistic Evidence, Areej M. A. Balilah, Yasaman Rafat and Lisa M. D. ArchibaldChapter Nineteen: Difficulties Facing Children in Learning English as a Foreign Language in the Libyan Context, Deya M. R. AL-Osta Omar, Ahmed Ayiad Gaibani and Fadil Elmenfi
PART SIX: MOTIVATION AND ERROR ANALYSIS IN FOREIGN LANGUAGE LEARNING
Chapter Twenty: The Role of Intrinsic Motivation and Oral Corrective Feedback in the EFL Classroom, Cirine Zouaidi and Tarek HermessiChapter Twenty-one: Omani EFL Written Errors at a College Level, Sharifa Said Ali Al-AdawiChapter Twenty-two: Investigating Motivational Factors in EFL Classroom from the Perspectives of Students at a Tertiary Context in Oman, Iman al-KadieChapter Twenty-three: An Error Analysis of Writing Skills among English Fo
Synopsis
This edited collection examines a range of English Language Teaching (ELT) research in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA). While the MENA context has witnessed considerable change in recent years, it has so far been under-represented in ELT research at both the regional and the international level. This book aims to fill that gap by surveying the current state of the field, examining in detail a range of issues and concepts, and suggesting future directions for further research. It will be of interest to ELT researchers and practitioners in general - not just those based in MENA contexts themselves.