February 2019
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LEADERSHIP UPDATES
A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR
Suzanne Franks, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois, USA

Dear Readers,

In this issue, we celebrate a milestone of one of SPLIS’s most remarkable advocates in a tribute to Judy Gilbert. To the readers who know her well, my hope is that you will once again feel thankful as you remember Judy’s contributions to SPLIS. To readers who have not had the privilege of knowing her, my hope is that you will delight in learning about a key figure, really, a hero, in our field. Most of all, may we all be inspired by Judy Gilbert’s dynamism, tirelessness, professional contributions, and more.

The remaining three articles also spoke to me vividly as a teacher and supervisor of pronunciation and ITA courses. Both Rebecca Oreto and Carlo Cinaglia illuminate common conversational routines and describe how to apply what we know about these common conversation sequences through practical in- and out-of-class learning experiences. Finally, I suspect that all ESL teachers, especially those who teach oral communication, long to convince their students that learning a language is a process and that a language-learning silver bullet doesn’t exist. Alison McGregor and Sarah Strigler expertly describe step by step a process-based approach to pronunciation instruction.

We hope you will find this newsletter informative, practical, and inspiring. See you in Atlanta!

Suzanne Franks
SPLIS Newsletter Editor

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Poll
In which one of the three sub fields of SPLIS do you especially hope to learn more about at the TESOL convention and in the SPLIS newsletter As We Speak?
Speaking
Pronunciation
Listening
All of the above

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS
CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

The SPLIS e-newsletter, As We Speak, is soliciting articles on any of the various aspects of teaching and tutoring pronunciation, oral skills, and listening that apply to and/or focus on ESL/EFL pedagogy, second language acquisition, accent addition/reduction, assessment of those skills, and other related research. We also solicit book reviews for both classroom and methodology texts. Teaching tips, tutoring tips, and classroom strategies are also acceptable submissions.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES

Articles should have the following characteristics:

  • Be no longer than 1,750 words (including teasers, tables, and bios)
  • Include a 50-word (500 characters or less) abstract
  • Contain no more than five citations
  • Follow the style guidelines in Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, Sixth Edition (APA)
  • Be in MS Word (.doc(x)) or rich text (.rtf) format

PUBLICATIONS OF MEMBERS
Have you published recently? We would like to include publications of SPLIS members in As We Speak. Send bibliographical information and hyperlinks of your publications to the newsletter editor.