000 04559nam a22003137a 4500
003 CO-BoICC
005 20190625091219.0
008 190113t1997 xxu||||fr|||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9781899396603
040 _aCO-BoICC
_bspa
041 0 _aeng
082 0 4 _222
_a428.24
_bL673i
100 1 _aLewis, Michael,
245 1 0 _aImplementing the lexical approach :
_bputting theory into practice /
_cMichael Lewis ; with classroom reports by Cherry Gough, Ron Martínez, Mark Powell, Jonathan Marks, George Woolard, Heinz Ribisch
260 _aReino Unido :
_bHeinle Cengage Learning,
_c1997
300 _a223 páginas ;
_c25 cm.
504 _aIncluye referencias bibliográficas.
505 0 _aWhat is the lexical approach?. -- Introduction. -- What is Lexis?. -- Sentences with special status. -- Reactions to The Lexical Approach. -- What changes can we expect?. -- Understanding lexis. -- Arbitrariness of lexical items. -- The size of the mental lexicon. -- Vocabulary is more than words. -- Words. -- Contractions. -- Polywords. -- Information content. -- Common words. -- De-lexicalised words. -- Collocations or word partnerships. -- Collocation is linguistic, not thematic. -- Arbitrariness of collocation. -- Collocations in text. -- Partnerships and relationships. -- Non-reciprocity of collocation. -- Information-content and collocation. -- Strong and frequent collocation. -- Collocation and grammar. -- Pedagogic value of collocation. -- Expressions. -- Lexical awareness helps. -- So what exactly is lexis, then?. -- Lexis is not enough. -- Evolving understanding. -- Lexis in the classroom. -- Skills as well as language. -- Selecting. -- Expanding the learners' lexicon. -- Learning strategies. -- Recording and revisiting. -- Practicing in the lexical approach. -- Learner participation. -- The value of repetition. -- Noticing. -- Consciousness-raising. -- The importance of negative evidence. -- The central strategy: pedagogical chunking. -- The role of L1 in the lexical approach. -- Translation is inevitable. -- Learning L2 is not identical to learning L1. -- Translation and lexis. -- Translation and collocation. -- The value of translation. -- Interference can be helpful. -- L1 awareness as a resource. -- Organising lexis. -- Principles. -- Notebooks. -- Exercises n the lexical approach. -- Exercises designed on lexical principles. -- Basic exercise types. -- Sample exercises. -- Adapting activities to provide a lexical focus. -- Sample activities. -- Classroom reports. -- Report 1: Introducing collocation / Cherry Gough. -- Report 2: Developing awareness of a de-lexicalised verb / Ron Martínez. -- Report 3: Sound scripting / Mar Powell. -- Report 4: Pronunciation in the lexical approach / Jonathan Marks. -- Report 5: Using literature / George Woolard. -- Report 6: Lexical notebooks / Heinz Ribish. -- Language content. -- Language areas deserving more attention. -- Modality. -- Vague language. -- Plywood phrases. -- Discourse-organizing language. -- Complex noun phrases. -- Even-reporting verbs. -- Events described in double-clause sentences. -- Responding and initiating. -- Lexical patterns. -- Real English and the classroom. -- Possible and probable English. -- Models and targets. -- Is there a core lexicon?. -- Lexical balance. -- Prototypicality. -- The existential paradigm. -- Teachers and teacher training. -- Background. -- The nature of the subject. -- Teachers need confidence with real English, not just EFL. -- Teachers' attitude to novel or unknown language. -- Ability to simplify their own speech. -- Methodology based on a realistic timetable. -- Lexis in teacher training. -- Deep understanding of the arbitrariness of the sign. -- Memory load. -- Confidence with pedagogical chunking. -- Choosing text-types. -- Lexical principles and texts. -- Implementing change for serving teachers. -- Familiarity with modern dictionaries. -- What would a lexical lesson be like?. -- Some central ideas. -- Some challenges to serving teachers. -- What next. -- Lexis in dictionaries. -- Lexis and grammar. -- The importance of spoken language. -- Lexis, grammar and phonology. -- The integrated approach.
541 _aTEMIS
_cCompra
_d05/10/2018
_hFactura - 18-416
650 1 7 _2ARMARC
_aInglés
_xVocabulario
_xEnseñanza
651 _2ARMARC
_aInglés
_xEnseñanza
_xEstudiantes extranajeros
700 1 _aGough, Cherry,
700 1 _aMartíne, Ron,
700 1 _aPowell, Mark,
700 1 _aMarks, Jonathan,
700 1 _aWoolard, George,
700 1 _aRibisch, Heinz,
942 _cRES
999 _c111041
_d111041