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Reading and writing

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2005

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05–63Brantmeier, Cindy (Washington U, USA; [email protected]). Effects of reader's knowledge, text type, and test type on L1 and L2 reading comprehension in Spanish. The Modern Language Journal (Madison, Wl, USA) 89.1 (2005), 37–53.

05–64Fisher, R (U of Exeter, UK; [email protected]). Teacher–child interaction in the teaching of reading: a review of research perspectives over twenty-five years. Journal of Research in Reading (Oxford, UK) 28.1 (2005), 15–27.

05–65Fukkink, Ruben G., Hulstijn, Jan & Simis, Annegien (U of Amsterdam, The Netherlands; [email protected]). Does training in second-language word recognition skills affect reading comprehension? An experimental study. The Modern Language Journal (Madison, Wl, USA) 89.1 (2005), 54–75.

05–66Jewitt, Carey (Institute of Education, U of London), Jones, Ken & Kress, Gunther. English in classrooms: only write down what you need to know: annotation for what?English in Education (Sheffield, UK) 39.1 (2005), 5–18.

05–67Kapitze, C. & Bruce, B. C. (Brisbane, Australia; [email protected]). The arobase in the libr@ry: new political economies of children's literature and literacies. Computers and Composition (New York, USA) 22.1 (2005), 69–78.

05–68Kress, Gunter (U of London, UK; [email protected]). Gains and losses: new forms of texts, knowledge, and learning. Computers and Composition (New York, USA) 22.1 (2005), 5–22.

05–69McCarthey, Sarah J. & Earnest García, Georgia (U of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA). English language learners' writing practices and attitudes. Written Communication (London, UK) 22.1 (2005), 36–75.

05–70Menon, Shailaja (U of Colorado, Boulder, USA; [email protected]) & Hiebert, Elfrieda H. A comparison of first graders' reading with little books or literature-based basal anthologies. Reading Research Quarterly (Newark, DE, USA) 40.1 (2005), 12–38.

05–71Petric B. (Central European U, Budapest, Hungary). Contrastive rhetoric in the writing classroom: a case study. English for Specific Purposes (Oxford, UK) 24.2 (2004), 213–228.

05–72Ramachandran, Subhadra (York U, Canada). Integrating new technologies into language teaching: two activities for an EAP classroom. TESL Canada Journal (Burnaby, Canada) 22.1 (2004), 79–89.

05–73Rollinson, P. ([email protected]). Using peer feedback in the ESL writing class. ELT Journal (Oxford, UK) 59.1 (2005), 23–30.

05–74Rubin, Bella (Tel Aviv U, Israel; [email protected]), Katznelson, Helen & Perpignan, Hadara. Learning for life: the potential of academic writing courses for individual EFL learners. System (Oxford, UK) 33.1 (2005), 17–27.

05–75Scherff, Lisa (U of Tennessee, USA) & Piazza, Carolyn. The more things change, the more they stay the same: a survey of high school students' writing experiences. Research in the Teaching of English (Urbana, IL USA) 39.3 (2005), 271–304.

05–76Schmidt, Claudia (Albert-Ludwig-U, Freiburg, Germany). Wörter lemen durch Lesen: eine empirische Untersuchung zum Strategieeinsatz des indirekten Lemens bei fortgeschrittenen japanischen DaF-Lernem/-innen [Learning words through reading. An empirical investigation into strategies of incidental learning-the case of Japanese advanced learners of German as a foreign language]. Fremdsprachen Lehren und Lernen (Tübingen, Germany) 33 (2004), 72–82.

05–77Shapiro, Amy M. & Waters, Dusty L. (U of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, USA; [email protected]). An investigation of the cognitive processes underlying the keyword method of foreign vocabulary learning. Language Teaching Research (London, UK) 9.2 (2005) 129–146.

05–78Taylor, Barbara M. (U of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA; [email protected]), Pearson, P. David, Peterson, Debra S. & Rodriguez, Michael C. The CIERA School Change Framework: an evidence-based approach to professional development and school reading improvement. Reading Research Quarterly (Newark, DE, USA) 40.1 (2005), 40–69.

05–79Wong, Albert, T. Y. (Hong Kong U, Hong Kong; [email protected]). Writers' mental representations of the intended audience and of the rhetorical purpose for writing and the strategies that they employed when they composed. System (Oxford, UK) 33.1 (2005), 29–47.

05–80Zhang, Ruwen (Zhejiang U of Finance and Economics, China; [email protected]). Using the principles of Exploratory Practice to guide group work in an extensive reading class in China. Language Teaching Research (London, UK) 8.3 (2004), 331–345.

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2005 Cambridge University Press