In this issue:
LEADERSHIP UPDATES
LETTER FROM THE CO-CHAIRS
21ST-CENTURY TECHNOLOGY AND LANGUAGE LEARNING: IMPORTANT NEW EVENTS AT THE 2020 TESOL CALL-IS ELECTRONIC VILLAGE AND TECHNOLOGY SHOWCASE
LETTER FROM THE COEDITORS
ARTICLES
BEYOND WORD MEANING: INCREASING LEARNERS' COLLOCATIONAL COMPETENCE THROUGH THE COCA
ABOUT THIS COMMUNITY
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
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ABOUT THIS COMMUNITY
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
The Computer-Assisted Language Learning Interest Section (CALL-IS) newsletter, On CALL, encourages submission of many types of articles related to CALL: software, website or book reviews, announcements, reports on conferences, presentations, or webcasts that you might have participated in. If you have suggestions, ideas, and/or questions, send them to Larry Udry or Suzanne Bardasz.
GENERAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Articles should adhere to the following:
- Have the title in ALL CAPS.
- List a byline: author’s name with hyperlinked email, affiliation, city, country, and an author photo (in that order).
- Include a 2- to 3-sentence (or shorter) teaser for the newsletter homepage.
- Be no longer than 1,750 words (includes bylines, teasers, main text, tables, and author bios). Articles longer than 1,750 can be included, but may not be copyedited.
- Contain no more than five citations.
- Have a 2- to 3-sentence author biography at the end of the article.
- Follow the style guidelines in the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 7th Edition (APA style).
- Be in .doc, .docx, .rtf, or .txt format.
- All figures, graphs, and other images should be sent in separate jpg files.
- If the author includes a photo, it must be:
- a head and shoulder shot;
- a jpg;
- width = 90px, height = 120px;
- clear, clean, professional, appropriate to the article;
- Have hyperlinks that have meaningful URLs.
- Accurately and completely credit sources, including students. Do not take online content (including photos) from other websites without attribution. Contact us for the permission forms.
- Get written permission for borrowed material (including photos) and send the signed permissions forms. Contact us for the permission forms.
If you’ve forgotten what our newsletter looks like, here is a link, so you can see for yourself.
A note on book reviews: Book reviews of between 300 and 500 words should provide the reviewer's analysis of books that are relevant to the practice and theory of CALL. A book review needs to be an evaluation, not just a summary; in addition to a (short) summary and key points, it should provide an appraisal of the book’s strengths and weaknesses. For example, do you have any critiques of the book, or suggestions on how it could be improved upon? Does it lack in any way, or have any shortcomings? Book review readers expect to hear both the pros and the cons of a book so they know that the review is unbiased and so they feel prepared to determine whether to invest in the book themselves.
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