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  1. Modern Languages in Scotland: Social capital out on a limb.Hannah Doughty - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (2):141-155.
    This article critically examines the state and status of modern language education in Scotland, which as a constituent part of the United Kingdom has its own independent education system. The notion of social capital, as conceptualized by Putnam and others, is used to show how attempts by language professionals in Scottish universities to create social ‘bridges’ and ‘linkages’ with stakeholders in schools have so far not been able to stem an overall downward trend in language study. As a major educational (...)
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  • Learning theory and technology in university foreign language education The case of French universities.Shona Whyte - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (2):213-234.
    Second language study in French universities includes both modern language and foreign language approaches, although teaching is dominated by the literary strand. Traditional educational models based on the transmission of knowledge are unable to accommodate recent progress in our understanding of learning theory, which offers cognitivist and constructivist approaches to learning and teaching. Similar advances specific to second language learning and teaching cannot be reconciled with the standard grammar-translation method, but instead call for communicative, task-oriented classrooms. This article traces the (...)
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  • Disciplinary disjunctures in the transition from secondary school to higher education study of modern foreign languages: A case study from the UK.Angela Gallagher-Brett & John Canning - 2011 - Arts and Humanities in Higher Education 10 (2):171-188.
    Discussions of student transition from the study of languages in UK high schools to the study of languages at university usually focus on the vertical transition, comparing the differences in curricula and approach to languages taken in each sector. Whilst acknowledging that this aspect of the student transition is important, this article explores the transition in a broader disciplinary context by raising questions about how other subjects students have studied before entering higher education may help or hinder the transition. As (...)
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