About [videos]
Upcoming Events
Curricular Focus
Experiential Learning
Our Vision
Mission Statement
People [videos]
Welcome
Collaborative Work
New Faculty Perspective
Open Positions
Faculty
Staff
Post-Doc
Advisory Boards
Visiting Scholars
Highlights [videos]
Courses for Medical Professionals
Languages in the Community
Languages
Arabic
Chinese
French
German
Hebrew
Hindi
Italian
Japanese
Korean
Portuguese
Russian
Spanish
Fall 2016 Courses & Instructors (PDF)
Language Placement Test [videos] ››
General Information
Test Instructions
FAQ
Technical issues
Contact Information
Student Resources ››
Student Lab
Language Tutor Schedule
Language Table Schedule
CLIC Room Schedule
Front Desk Staff Schedule
Description
Requirements
Application Process
Certificate News (PDF)
Internships [videos]
Outcomes
Supervisor's Perspective
Student's Perspective
Service Learning
Medical Spanish Students Lead Health Seminars (PDF)
MBCN
Centro Corazón
Step Ahead
Read to Children
Pershing Middle School
Research [videos]
Faculty Projects
Postdoc Projects
Research Summary
Projects
Study Abroad Assessment
Interactional Competence: Beginning
Interactional Competence: Full cycle
Corpus-based Pedagogy (JIU)
Upcoming conferences
Study Abroad (February 2017)
Pedagogical Data Design (May 2017)
Useful Assessment in L2 (Oct 2017)
Interactional Competence (2018)
Previous conferences-PROGRAMS
Workshops for L2 teachers (PDF)
Spoken Chinese Corpora (PDF)
Previous Conferences - Programs
Professional Development [video]
CLIC Projects
Bridging Research and Practice Site
MOOCS: Spanish for Health
Speaker Series
2016-2017
2015-2016
Workshops
2014-2015
2013-2014
Developing and Assessing Interactional Competence: Beginning Level
The construct of Interactional Competence (IC) has recently gained more attention in the field of second language acquisition. Being interactionally competent in a second language means being able to engage in a conversation and interact actively with interlocutors. Most of the studies conducted so far have aimed to produce theoretical and operational definitions of IC by exploring the features and functions of IC and the role of conversational partners in various everyday and institutional settings. Little attention has been paid to pedagogical approaches that attempt to develop and assess IC in L2 classrooms.
Therefore, the current study aims to move the focus onto the classroom, by designing and implementing an IC instructional component for the first-semester Chinese language course. The research question addressed by this study is the following: Can IC instruction enhance beginning students’ IC? The study will compare two groups of students enrolled in the first-semester Chinese language courses (CHIN 141). One group of students will receive IC instruction, whereas the other one will be exposed to the traditional type of first-semester language instruction with no explicit pedagogical focus on IC. The students in both groups will have two one-on-one conversations with Chinese native speakers during the Fall 2015 semester.