Lecturers and Topics Covered in Past Seminars
Following are the lecturers and topics covered in past seminars at Distinguished Lecturer Series.
- 2008-2009
- 2007-2008
- 2006-2007
- 2005-2006
- 2004-2005
- 2003-2004
- 2002-2003
- 2001-2002
- 2000-2001
- 1999-2000
- 1998-1999
- 1997-1998
- 1996-1997
- 1995-1996
- 1994-1995
- 1993-1994
- 1992-1993
- 1991-1992
- 1990-1991
- 1989-1990
- 1988-1989
- 1987-1988
- 1986-1987
2008-2009
- Thomas Farrell (Brock University): Reflective Practice for Language Teachers
- Merrill Swain (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto): Sociocultural Theory and Second Language Learning
- Gail Weinstein (San Francisco State University): Using Authentic Stories in EFL: Bringing Learner-centered Practice to Global English
- Peter Robinson (Aoyama Gakuin): Predicting and Measuring the Effects of L2 Task Demands on Learning and Performance: Theory, Research, and Practice
- Michael Bostwick (Katoh Gakuen): Educational Administration and Leadership
- George Jacobs (Singapore): Cooperative Learning in the Foreign Language Classroom
- Rose Senior (University of Western Australia): Class-centered Teaching: A Framework for Understanding the Nature of Effective Language Teaching
- Stuart Webb (Victoria University of Wellington): Teaching, Learning, and Researching Vocabulary
- Rod Ellis (University of Auckland): Interlanguage Pragmatics
2007-2008
- George Engelhard (Emory University): Constructing Measures with the Many-faceted Rasch Model?
- Patrick Rosenkjar (Temple University): Using Literature in Teaching Language
- Ryuko Kubota (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill): Critical Approaches to Language Teaching: Introduction and Current Perspectives
- Steven J. Ross (Kwansei Gakuin University): Structural and Longitudinal Modeling with Hierarchical and Covariance Structure Analysis
- Rod Ellis (University of Auckland): Current Perspectives on Task-Based Language Teaching
- Noriko Ishihara (Meiji University): Teaching Pragmatics Where Language and Culture Meet: Enhancing Cultural Appropriateness in Language Learning
- Keith Folse (University of Central Florida): Vocabulary Myths: Applying Second Language Research to Classroom Teaching
- Sandra Lee McKay (San Francisco State University): Developing Culturally Sensitive, Communicative Materials for Japanese Junior and Senior High School English Language Learners
- Don Carroll (Shikoku Gakuin University): Conversation Analysis: Observations and Implications for the Classroom
- James Lantolf (Pennsylvania State University): Sociocultural Theory and the Pedagogical Imperative
2006-2007
- Trevor Bond (Hong Kong Institute of Education): Introduction to the Use of Rasch Analysis in Educational Research
- Michael Bostwick (Katoh Gakuen): Current Issues in Bilingual and Immersion Education in Japan
- Judy Noguchi (Mukogawa University and Osaka Graduate School of Engineering): ESP (English for Specific Purposes) for EFL Environments: Concepts, Convenient Tools, and Challenges
- Thomas Cobb (University of Quebec, Montreal): Computer-assisted Reading
- Batia Laufer (University of Haifa): Learning Vocabulary in a Second Language: What Do We Know About It from Research?
- Yasuko Kanno (University of Washington): Bilingualism, Education, and Identity
- Sandra Lee McKay (San Francisco State University): Developing a Personal Research and Publication Agenda: Research Strategies for Language Teachers
- Noel Houck (California State Polytechnic University): Teaching Grammar in Discourse
- Eli Hinkel (Seattle University): Teaching Intercultural Communication: The Effect of Socio-cultural Values on Conversational Interactions
2005-2006
- Rod Ellis (University of Auckland): Analyzing Learner Language
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Current Issues in Vocabulary Teaching and Learning
- Gabriele Kasper (University of Hawaii): Conversation Analysis as an Approach to Second Language Acquisition
- Christine Casanave (Columbia Teachers College): The Many Uses of Journal Writing
- George Jacobs (Singapore): Using Multiple Intelligences in the Classroom
- Lyle Bachman (UCLA): Assuring That Our Uses of Language Assessment Results Are Justifiable
- Haruko Cook (University of Hawaii): Language Learning in Context: Second Language Learners' Acquisition of Speech Style
- Mitsue Allen-Tamai (Bunkyo Gakuin University): Teaching English to Young Learners
- Christine Casanave (Temple University, Japan Campus): Controversies in Teaching Second Language Writing
2004-2005
- Mitsue Allen-Tamai (Bunkyo Gakuin University): Teaching English to Young Learners
- Rod Ellis (University of Auckland): Task-Based Language Learning and Teaching
- Ulla Connor (Indiana University): Current Perspectives on Contrastive Rhetoric: From Contrastive to Intercultural Rhetoric
- Peter MacIntyre (Cape Breton University): Affective Processes in Second Language Learning
- Cynthia Nelson (University of Technology, Sydney): Issues in Sexual Identity: What Educators Should Know
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): Researching Second Language Classrooms
- Eli Hinkel (Seattle University): Building a Writing Course from Student Writing and Texts
- Patricia Porter (San Francisco State University): Techniques for Teaching Grammar
- Noel Houck (California State Polytechnic University): Classroom Applications of Current Research
2003-2004
- George Jacobs (Singapore): Cooperative Learning in the Foreign Language Classroom
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Current Trends in Teaching Vocabulary
- Christine Casanave (Columbia Teachers College): Controversies in Teaching Second Language Writing
- George Jacobs (Singapore): Extensive Reading in the Foreign Language Classroom
- Douglas Biber (Northern Arizona University): Introduction to Corpus Linguistics
- Judy Noguchi (Mukogawa Women's University): English for Specific Purposes
- Andy Curtis (Queen's University, Ontario): Classroom-based Research and Professional Development for English Language Teachers
- Noel Houck (California State Polytechnic University): Introduction to Speech Act and Discourse Theory
- Patricia Duff (University of British Columbia): A Social Approach to Second Language Acquisition
2002-2003
- Amy Snyder Ohta (University of Washington): Classroom Second Language
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State Unviersity): The Role of Culture in English Teaching
- Peter Yongqi Gu (National Institute of Education, Nyang Technological University, Singapore): Language Learning Strategies
- Nick Ellis (University of Wales Bangor): Words in the Mind and Brain: Implications for Vocabulary Acquisition and Instruction
- Patricia Porter (San Francisco State University): Teaching Listening and Speaking: Tasks for Oral Communication
- Nick Ellis (University of Wales Bangor): Usage-based and Form-focused Second Language Acquisition
- Gabriele Kasper (University of Hawaii): Misunderstanding Talk: Discourse Approaches to Problematic Interaction
- Michael Rost (University of California, Berkeley): Listening in Language Learning
- Robin Scarcella (University of California, Irvine): Practical Approaches to Teaching Academic English
2001-2002
- Yuko Kawanishi (Temple University): Introduction to the Sociology of Education
- Jenny Thomas (University of Wales Bangor): Pragmatics and Language Teaching
- Christine Casanave (Keio University): The Many Uses of Journal Writing
- Mitsue Allen-Tamai (Bunkyo Women's University): Teaching English to Young Learners
- Joan Morley (University of Michigan): Current Perspectives on Pronunciation
- James Dean Brown (University of Hawaii): University Entrance Examinations in Japan: What Should They Be in the Future?
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Teaching and Learning Vocabulary
- Noel Houck (California State University, Long Beach): Discourse Analysis and the Language Classroom
- Stephen Krashen (University of Southern California): English as a Foreign Language: Current Controversies and Conjectures
2000-2001
- George Yule: Reinventing Grammar Teaching
- Bonny Norton (University of British Columbia): Beyond Motivation: Investment and Identity in Second Language Acquisition
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Communicative Approaches to Teaching Vocabulary
- Norbert Schmitt (University of Nottingham): An Incremental Learning Perspective on Vocabulary Acquisition, Use, and Assessment
- Robert C. Gardner (University of Western Ontario): Integrative Motivation: Past, Present, and Future
- Marianne Gullberg (Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics): Gestures and the Second Language Learner: From the Acquisition of Gestures to Gestures in Acquisition
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): The Language Teacher as Researcher: Developing a Research and Publishing Agenda
- Noel Houck (California State University, Long Beach): Teaching Pragmatics in the Foreign Language Classroom
- Michael Rost (University of California, Berkeley): Teaching and Researching Listening
1999-2000
- Ellen Skilton-Sylvester (Temple University): Teachers as Qualitative Researchers
- Kathryn Davis (University of Hawaii): Bilingualism
- Patricia Porter (San Francisco State University): Techniques for Teaching English Grammar
- Christine Casanave (Keio University): EFL Writing Research and Instruction
- Peter MacIntyre (Cape Breton University): Affective Processes in Second Language Learning
- Michael Long (University of Hawaii): Task-Based Language Teaching
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): English Teaching in the 21st Century
- Aneta Pavlenko (Temple University): Gender and SLA
1998-1999
- Kate Wolfe-Quintero (University of Hawaii): Pedagogical Grammar
- Gabriele Kasper (University of Hawaii): Communication Strategies
- Rod Ellis (University of Auckland): Task-Based Research
- Stephen J. Gaies (University of Northern Iowa): Language Education in Japan
- Ulla Connor (Indiana University): Researching and Teaching Writing
- Michael Rost (University of California, Berkeley): Researching and Teaching Listening
- C. William Gay (Temple University, Japan Campus): Humanistic Activities
- Patricia Porter (San Francisco State University): Teaching Listening and Speaking
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Teaching and Learning Vocabulary
1997-1998
- Graham Crookes (University of Hawaii): Action Research
- Kenneth Rose (City University of Hong Kong): Speech Acts & L2 Learning
- David Eskey (University of Southern California): Teaching EFL Reading
- Thomas Scovel (San Francisco State University): Introduction to Psycholinguistics
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Creating, Evaluating, and Adapting Teaching Techniques
- Jan Hulstijn (Free University of Amsterdam): The Acquisition of Second Language Vocabulary
- Batia Laufer (University of Haifa): Acquisition of Foreign Language Vocabulary
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): Writing for Publication
1996-1997
- Sarah H. Freedman (University of California, Berkeley): Research on L2 Writing
- Janet Holmes (Victoria University of Wellington): Sociolinguistics and L2 Learning
- Ulla Connor (Indiana University): Contrastive Rhetoric
- Merrill Swain (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto): The Role of Output in SLA
- Stephen J. Gaies (University of Northern Iowa): History of Education in Japan
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): Writing for Publication
- Peter Robinson (Aoyama Gakuin University): Task Complexity and Second Language Syllabus Design
- Kathryn Davis (University of Hawaii): Interpretive Qualitative Research in Second Language Acquisition
- Brian Tomlinson (University of Luton): Materials Development
1995-1996
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): Qualitative Research
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Teaching Techniques
- Ron Carter (University of Nottingham): Literature and Language Teaching
- Elite Olshtain (Hebrew University of Jerusalem): Discourse Analysis and L2 Teaching
- Catherine Doughty (Georgetown University): Focus on Form
- Florian Coulmas (Chuo University): Language and Economy
- Rod Ellis (Temple University): Teaching Tasks
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Teaching and Learning Vocabulary
- Michael Rost (University of California, Berkeley): Listening in Language Learning
1994-1995
- Stephen J. Gaies (University of Northern Iowa): Cooperative Language Learning
- Charles W. Gay (Temple University, Japan Campus): Humanistic Activities
- Ron Carter (University of Nottingham): Language Awareness and ELT
- Susan Gass (Michigan State University): Input and Interaction in SLA
- Janet Holmes (Victoria University of Wellington): Sociolinguistic Competence, Gender, and SLA
- Ulla Connor (Indiana University): Teaching and Research EFL Writing
- Mark Sawyer (Kwansei Gakuin University): Experimental Research Methods
- Fred Genesee (McGill University): Alternatives in Classroom Assessment
- Rod Ellis (Temple University): Options in Teaching Grammar
1993-1994
- Juliane House (University of Hamburg): Translation and Communication
- Kathleen Bardovi-Harlig (Indiana University): Tense and Aspect in SLA
- Bernard Comrie (University of Southern California): Language Universals
- Michael Sharwood Smith (Utrecht University): Pedagogical Grammar
- Peter Skehan (Thames Valley University): Individual Differences
- Steven Ross (University of Hawaii): Oral Proficiency Assessment
- Johannes Wagner (Odense University): Games in Foreign Language Teaching
- Guy Cook (University of London): Discourse Analysis
- Richard Schmidt (University of Hawaii): Consciousness and SLA
1992-1993
- V. J. Cook (University of Essex): Processes in Learning a Second Language
- Paul Nation (Victoria University of Wellington): Teaching and Learning Vocabulary
- Teresa Pica (University of Pennsylvania): Negotiation and Conversation
- William Grabe (University of Northern Arizona): Theory and Practice of Reading
- Kathleen Bailey (Monterey Institute of International Studies): Teacher Development
- Sarah Murray (Rhodes University South Africa): English for Academic Purposes
- Gordon Wells (Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto): On Talk, Text and Inquiry
- Leo van Lier (Monterey Institute of International Studies): Awareness, Autonomy, and Authenticity
1991-1992
- Ron White (University of Reading): Teaching Writing
- Richard Schmidt (University of Hawaii): Formulaic Speech and SLA
- Patricia Hedge (Ealing): Using Extensive Reading
- Craig Chaudron (University of Hawaii): Second Language Research Methods
- Eric Kellerman (University of Nijmegen): Crosslinguistic Influence in SLA
- Thom Hudson (University of Hawaii): Developing Language Tests
- N. C. Ellis (University of Wales Bangor): Cognitive Psychology of L2 Learning
- Sandra Savignon (University of Illinois): Shaping a Communicative Curriculum
- Martha Pennington (The Hong Kong Polytechnic University): Phonology in ELT
1990-1991
- Hans W. Dechert (University of Kassel): Second Language Speech Processing
- Sandra McKay (San Francisco State University): Varieties of American English
- Celia Roberts (Ealing): Cross-Cultural Communication
- Kathleen Bailey (Monterey Institute of International Studies): Language-Teacher Development
- Gabriele Kasper (University of Hawaii): Cross-Cultural Pragmatics
- Marguerite Ann Snow (California State University, Los Angeles): Language and Content
- William Rutherford (University of Southern California): SLA and the Structure of English
- Lydia White (McGill University): Learnability and SLA
- Patricia Dunkel (Penn State University): Listening Comprehension
1989-1990
- David Nunan (Macquarie University): Learner-Centered Curriculum
- H. Douglas Brown (San Francisco State University): The Successful Language Learner
- Stephen Gaies (University of Northern Iowa): Cooperative Language Learning
- N. S. Prabhu (National University of Singapore): Designing Reading Tasks
- Keith Johnson (University of Reading): The Acquisition of Language Skills
- Susan Gass (Michigan State University): Issues in Second Language Acquisition
- Charlene Sato (University of Hawaii): Interactional Sociolinguistics
- John Swales (University of Michigan): English for Specific Purposes
- Alister Cumming (The University of British Columbia): Research and Teaching L2 Writing
1988-1989
- Kenji Hakuta (University of California, Santa Cruz): Bilingualism
- John Oller (University of New Mexico): Testing Communicative Competence
- Sandra Savignon (University of Illinois): Teaching for Meaning
- Evelyn Hatch (UCLA): L2 Acquisition and Language Teaching
- J. D. Brown (University of Hawaii): Curriculum Design and Evaluation
- Teresa Pica (University of Pennsylvania): Research and Language Learning
- Robert Bley-Vroman (University of Hawaii): Universal Grammar
- Thomas Scovel (San Francisco State University): A Model for L2 Acquisition
- Manfred Pienemann (The University of Sydney): The Psycholinguistic Basis of L2 Learning
1987-1988
- H. G. Widdowson (University of London): Communicative Language Teaching
- Patsy Lightbown (Concordia University): Second Language Acquisition Research
- Michael Long (University of Hawaii): Classroom Oriented Research
- Richard Via (University of Hawaii): Drama in TESL
- Robert DiPietro (University of Delaware): Learning Language Through Scenarios
- Andrew Cohen (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem): Communicative Language Testing
- Stephen Gales (University of Northern Iowa): Developing Listening Ability
- Christopher Candlin (Macquarie University): Language, Culture, and Curriculum
- Vivian Zamel (University of Massachusetts Boston): The Teaching of Writing
- Rod Ellis (Ealing): Instructed Second Language Acquisition
1986-1987
- Robert Kaplan (University of Southern California): Teaching Writing
- Wilga Rivers (Harvard University): Cycles of Language Teaching Approaches
- Charlene Sato (University of Hawaii): Discourse-Based Pedagogical Grammar
- Bernard Spolsky (Bar-Ilan University): Conditions for L2 Learning
- Larry Selinker (University of Michigan): Language for Specific Purposes
- Donald Bowen (UCLA): Teaching Pronunciation
- Fred Genesee (McGill University): Learning Through Immersion
- Anne Raimes (City University of New York): The Teaching of Writing
- Roy Andrew Miller (University of Washington): The Japanese Language
- Harold Madsen (Brigham Young University): Testing in ESL
- Bernard Mohan (The University of British Columbia): Content Based Teaching
For more information, please contact us at the Osaka center.
E-mail: tesol@tuj.ac.jp / Tel: 06-6343-0005