Welcome to the newsletter! I have been asked by Natalia,
newsletter editor, to report on our recent activities for the Applied
Linguistics Interest Section (ALIS).
Greetings, ALIS members! Our interest section (IS) has a robust
membership within TESOL that represents a wide range of interests and
interdisciplinary connections. As stated in our IS’s recently revised
statement of purpose, our goal is to “promote research in all areas of
language use, particularly research that contributes to our
understanding of language learning and teaching…to promulgate knowledge
derived from such research…in an attempt to address real-world,
language-based issues pertinent to English language teaching.” We have
been working to fulfill this goal through broader communication within
our IS and beyond, through broad-based activities not only at the TESOL
Convention but also in webinar formats and in innovations to our
newsletter format under the editorship of Natalia Dolgova.
During this past year, we organized a successful webinar in
collaboration with the Computer-Assisted Language Learning IS, entitled
“Technology and Language Research and Teaching” with Shannon Sauro and
Volker Hegelheimer. We hope to organize another webinar this fall or
winter (U.S. time), so keep an eye out for that invitation. TESOL 2018 was
also a great success, including a panel on critical approaches in
applied linguistics, and two well-attended InterSections.
We are looking forward to the 2019 TESOL Convention, which will
be organized under the new “strand” structure for the first time. This
means that proposals were submitted directly to a set of theme-based
strands that are distinct from the ISs. The ISs, on the other hand,
still organize InterSection panels (in collaboration with one or more
other ISs) and an academic session. One of our InterSections will be
organized in conjunction with the Second Language Writing IS, exploring
the challenges and barriers to ensuring that current research is
represented in writing textbooks, in a session entitled, “Beyond
Five-Paragraph Essays: Why Don’t Writing Textbooks Reflect Current
Research?” Our second InterSection is a collaboration with the Refugee
Concerns IS, investigating how refugee-background learners are
represented in societal discourses, in classroom materials, and in their
own narratives and discourses, and is entitled, “Discourses of
Representation for Refugee-Background Learners: Empowerment and
Collaboration.” Our Chair-Elect, Ben White, describes the academic
session that he is organizing:
As the chair-elect, I am responsible for organizing an ALIS
academic session at TESOL 2019. Work is currently underway on a
colloquium that will spotlight cognitive linguistics and sociocultural
theory and the promise both hold for more effective ESL/EFL pedagogy.
Further details on the individual talks will be provided in the next
(preconvention) newsletter.
We hope that you will join us in Atlanta for these sessions! Also from Ben:
I am in the process of establishing a series of webinars with
authors of recent TESOL Quarterly articles. The basic
idea is to invite authors of the most-read articles for an opportunity
to interact directly with readers—in a sense, to bring their articles to
life. TESOL members will be able to pose questions directly to these
researchers, and the researchers will have the opportunity to tell the
stories behind their studies. Stay tuned for details.
On another note, we invite your participation at the TESOL
Convention and beyond. We are hoping to entice members into leadership
positions, such as co-editor of the newsletter, or social media
coordinator. These are good entryways into more substantial leadership
positions, such as IS chair. I’d like to thank Olga Griswold for her
work over the past few years as chair-elect, and then chair. Ben White
has also been active as co-editor of the newsletter, and now as
chair-elect, contributing significantly to our successful IS transition
proposal to TESOL. Natalia Dolgova has done a fabulous job with this
newsletter over the past few years, bringing new directions and
connections to this venue. And, I am also grateful to our veteran
leader, Eli Hinkel, who remains our community manager.
Please let me know if you are interested in joining our
leadership team to help steward and grow our IS. If you have suggestions
for webinars that you would like to see us sponsor, please let me know.
See you in 2019!
ALIS Chair,
Kathryn Howard |