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Individual Differences and Task-Based Language Teaching

HardboundAvailable
ISBN 9789027214768 | EUR 120.00 | USD 156.00
 
e-Book
ISBN 9789027246950 | EUR 120.00 | USD 156.00
 
This volume consists of a collection of empirical studies and research syntheses investigating the role of individual difference (ID) variables in task-based language teaching (TBLT)—a pedagogical approach that emphasizes the importance of the performance of meaning-oriented tasks in facilitating second language learning. TBLT is subject to learner-external as well as learner-internal factors, with the former referring to task- and context-related factors, and the latter to ID factors pertaining to learner traits, dispositions, or propensities. To date, the research has focused primarily on learner-external factors, and there has been insufficient and unsystematic research on individual difference factors. This volume brings centre stage this important but under-researched dimension by means of a comprehensive, in-depth examination of the role of key ID factors in TBLT. The volume integrates theory, research, and pedagogy by spelling out the mechanism through which IDs influence learning attainment, behaviours, and processes, examining evidence for theoretical claims, and discussing ways to apply research findings and cater to individual differences in the task-based classroom.
[Task-Based Language Teaching, 16] 2024.  viii, 379 pp
Publishing status: Available
Published online on 23 May 2024
Table of Contents
“While the need to individualize instruction is one of the 10 methodological principles of TBLT (Long, 2015), teachers report that they do not know how to design tasks to cater for individual learner needs (Erlam & Tolosa, 2022). Fortunately, we now have this important book to address this gap.”
“Every person is unique; therefore, tasks must interact with the complex attributes of individuals. This much-needed volume illuminates a blind spot in task-based language teaching. Tasks need real people to engage with them, and understanding how tasks are enacted differently by different people is to better understand how meaning is made.”
“This book fills a significant gap in the growing literature on task-based language teaching. Integrating theory, research, and pedagogy, it provides invaluable insights into how learners vary in their response to task-based instruction. The book is a must-read for both applied linguists and language educators.”
Cited by (13)

Cited by 13 other publications

Qiu, Xuyan, Gavin Bui & Xinxin Yao
2026. Task type, task elements, and L2 grit: Predictors of ESL learners’ behavioural engagement in computer-mediated oral tasks. System 137  pp. 103925 ff. DOI logo
Chen, Liping & Wei Dan
2025. The moderating effect of phonological short-term memory and executive working memory on relative clause use in narrative tasks. The Language Learning Journal 53:6  pp. 805 ff. DOI logo
Hiver, Phil, Phung Dao & Joseph S. Yamazaki
2025. L2 task engagement: A research agenda. Language Teaching  pp. 1 ff. DOI logo
Kim, Jeungeun (Claudia) & Shaofeng Li
2025. The effects of task repetition and corrective feedback on L2 writing development. The Language Learning Journal 53:6  pp. 729 ff. DOI logo
Lambert, Craig & Scott Aubrey
2025. The Role of the Learner in Task Performance and Acquisition: Evidence from New and Emerging Perspectives. TESOL Quarterly DOI logo
Leeming, Paul & Justin Harris
2025. Self‐Efficacy and Collective‐Efficacy as Predictors of Engagement in Group Conversation. TESOL Quarterly DOI logo
Li, Shaofeng, Jie Li & Jiancheng Qian
2025. What Is the Ideal Time to Provide Corrective Feedback? An Approximate Replication of Li, Zhu, and Ellis (2016). Language Learning DOI logo
Mansouri, Mohammad Reza, Mansoor Tavakoli & Zahra Amirian
2025. Effects of task repetition awareness and the need for cognition on the complexity, accuracy, and fluency of L2 oral performance. Cogent Education 12:1 DOI logo
Qiu, Xuyan
2025. Communicative task engagement in second language learning and teaching: a scoping review. The Language Learning Journal 53:6  pp. 819 ff. DOI logo
Sun, Peijian Paul, Chenxin Li & Zhen Liang
2025. Working memory, L2 proficiency, and L2 speech performance across different task types. Language Teaching Research DOI logo
Xing, Weili (Allen) & Mark Feng Teng
2025. Assessing video-mediated communicative tasks for vocabulary learning. The Language Learning Journal 53:6  pp. 791 ff. DOI logo
Xu, Jiamin & Melissa Baralt
2025. Task-based language teaching for Chinese as a foreign language: a qualitative research synthesis. Chinese as a Second Language Research 14:2  pp. 201 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 12 december 2025. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.

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U.S. Library of Congress Control Number:  2024009665 | Marc record
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