Get fulltext from our e-platform


Early Language Education in Instructed Contexts
Current issues and empirical insights into teaching and learning languages in primary school
e-Book – Open Access 

ISBN 9789027244741
This volume presents state-of-the-art research in early foreign language (L2) education in instructed contexts with a special focus on primary school (ages 5-12). Over the past two decades, early language teaching has become an important factor in both academic inquiry and education policy. Studies have attested to the value of early L2 learning but also revealed specific features and challenges, which highlights the need for more high-quality empirical research. This book addresses this need by presenting current international research on early L2 teaching and learning in regular and CLIL contexts in the primary school setting. Uniting insights from 12 countries, the studies shed light on current issues such as teaching and assessment practice, emerging L2 literacy instruction, teaching materials, and teachers’, parents’ and learners’ perspectives. The volume thus contributes significantly to the advancement of early language education and is an essential resource for researchers and educators in the field.
[Language Learning & Language Teaching, 62] 2025. xiv, 330 pp.
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 22 May 2025
Published online on 22 May 2025
© John Benjamins
Available under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives (CC BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.
For any use beyond this license, please contact the publisher at rights@benjamins.nl.
Table of Contents
- Notes on the contributors | pp. vii–xiv
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. Early language education in instructed contexts: An introductionKaren Glaser and Stefanie Frisch | pp. 2–18
- Part I. Assessment and teaching practices
- Chapter 2. Child-centered assessment research and practice: Current issuesYuko Goto Butler | pp. 20–42
- Chapter 3. Primary school learners benefit from captioned video viewing: Vocabulary learning, viewing distribution and perceptionsDaniela Avello and Carmen Muñoz | pp. 43–64
- Chapter 4. On teachers’ use of the L1 in primary English classrooms in GermanyHolger Limberg | pp. 64–91
- Part II. Emerging L2 literacy in instructed contexts
- Chapter 5. Paving the way for L2 literacy skills from the start — raising phonographic awareness in the primary English language classroomAnne Schrader | pp. 94–117
- Chapter 6. L2 spelling predictors of young German learners of EnglishHeike Mlakar, Joanna Hirst-Plein and Martin J. Koch | pp. 118–140
- Chapter 7. Faktör — factoure — facteure? The development of French vowel spelling in a German-French bilingual primary schoolAnne Lorenz and Constanze Weth | pp. 140–159
- Chapter 8. Young learners’ verbal reports of their writing strategies when composing an explanatory text in CLIL scienceYvette Coyle and Julio Roca de Larios | pp. 160–183
- Part III. Teaching and learning materials
- Chapter 9. Speech acts in English language textbooks for young language learners in CroatiaEva Jakupčević and Mihajla Ćavar Portolan | pp. 186–208
- Chapter 10. Intercultural and citizenship objectives through picturebooks in early language learning: Teacher-made resources for Taking Action projectsNayr C. Ibrahim and Sandie Mourão | pp. 208–232
- Chapter 11. An English listening comprehension learning game and its effect on phonological awarenessEmilie Charles, Emilie Magnat, Marie-Pierre Jouannaud, Coralie Payre-Ficout and Mathieu Loiseau | pp. 233–258
- Part IV. Teacher, parent and learner views of early language education
- Chapter 12. Student teachers’ and mentors’ perceptions of effective teaching techniques in the primary L2 English classroomKristin Kersten, Karen Glaser, Hannah Ruhm, Jana Roos, Sonja Brunsmeier and Martin J. Koch | pp. 260–285
- Chapter 13. Starting early or late? Parental perspectives on the onset of English language education at primary school in GermanyDominik Rumlich and Raphaela Porsch | pp. 286–305
- Chapter 14. The transition from primary school bilingual programmes to regular foreign language lessons in secondary school: A longitudinal perspectiveAnja Steinlen, Daniela Schwarz and Thorsten Piske | pp. 306–327
- Index | pp. 329–330