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1
Another Look at Norris and Ortega (2000)
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 15-38 (2015) (2015)
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2
“That’s the Work”: Reframing Talk during Meetings
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 42-44 (2015) (2015)
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3
Business and Service Telephone Conversations: An Investigation of British English, German, and Italian Encounters
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 14, Iss 1, Pp 35-38 (2015) (2015)
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4
Language Development Over the Lifespan
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 10, Iss 2, Pp 37-40 (2015) (2015)
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5
Task Complexity and Linguistic Complexity: An Exploratory Study
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-28 (2015) (2015)
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6
Complex Systems and Applied Linguistics
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 9, Iss 2, Pp 82-85 (2015) (2015)
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7
Formulaic Language: Pushing the Boundaries
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 9, Iss 1, Pp 1-3 (2015) (2015)
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8
Category Terms as Story-Telling Shortcuts
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 13, Iss 1, Pp 46-48 (2015) (2015)
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9
Guarded Play: Multi-Tasking in Parent-Child Interactions
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 51-54 (2015) (2015)
Abstract: This brief analysis utilizes a CA perspective to deepen our understanding of the ways in which participants in interactions are able to handle more than one activity simultaneously. Many of the studies on multi-tasking, as Good (2009) noted, address this from a cognitive science perspective (e.g. Salvucci, 2005; Salvucci, Taatgen, & Kushleyeva, 2006), focusing on the brain’s ability to attend to several tasks at once. According to this work, we humans do a less than stellar job at balancing more than one thing at a time. In fact, with each task we add to the mix, our performance suffers that much more. As a social scientist, I find these conclusions enlightening and worthy of further study. As a mother, I chuckle, because even as I write this, my ear is bent to my daughter doing homework and the dinner that is on the stove, and I have gotten up from my workstation twice to wipe the bedroom wall clean of all traces of marker from my son’s dirty hands. Since at the end of the day, every member of my family is fed, cleaned, and accounted for, I proclaim that I do my job successfully. Thus, I agree wholeheartedly with the argument (Good, 2009) that by looking at the social action of multi-tasking as it happens in real time, as it happens so many nights in the lives of families, we might complicate the notion that it is something that humans simply cannot do well.
Keyword: Applied linguistics; Conversation analysis; Education; English language; Families; Human multitasking; Language acquisition; Linguistics; Multi-tasking; P118-118.7; PE1-3729; Social science
URL: https://doaj.org/article/1b16b07f30ec443a8935c4b5ac4cbbea
https://doi.org/10.7916/D8VH61GX
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10
Unified Discourse Analysis: Language, Reality, Virtual Worlds, and Video Games
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 14, Iss 2, Pp 63-67 (2015) (2015)
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11
Chilean Clitic Reduplication: Implications for Morphology and Syntax
In: Working Papers in Applied Linguistics and TESOL, Vol 12, Iss 2, Pp 17-37 (2015) (2015)
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