科研助力| Applied Linguistics(影响因子3.250)的十大高引论文
The latest Journal Citation Reports® have recently been released and revealed that Applied Linguistics’ latest Impact Factor has risen significantly from 1.453 to 3.250*. The journal is now ranked 2nd out of 178 journals in the 'Linguistics' category.
To celebrate this increase we have made a selection of the most cited articles from the journal free to read online.
*2016 Journal Citation Reports® (Thomson Reuters, 2016)
Critical Analysis of CLIL: Taking Stock and Looking Forward
by Jasone Cenoz, Fred Genesee, and Durk Gorter
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (3)
“You Can Stand Under My Umbrella”: Immersion, CLIL and Bilingual Education. A Response to Cenoz, Genesee & Gorter (2013)
by Christiane Dalton-Puffer, Ana Llinares, Francisco Lorenzo, and Tarja Nikula
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (2)
A Classification of Genre Families in University Student Writing
by Sheena Gardner and Hilary Nesi
Applied Linguistics (2013) 34 (1)
A New Academic Vocabulary List
by Dee Gardner and Mark Davies
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (3)
English as a Lingua Franca: An Immanent Critique
by John P. O'Regan
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (5)
Doing Being Playful in the Second Language Classroom
by Hansun Zhang Waring
Applied Linguistics (2013) 34 (2)
A Prolegomenon to the Construct of the Native Speaker: Heritage Speaker Bilinguals are Natives Too!
by Jason Rothman and Jeanine Treffers-Daller
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (1)
The Roles of Third-Turn Repeats in Two L2 Classroom Interactional Contexts
by Yujong Park
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (2)
The Interactional and Narrative Construction of Normative and Resistant Discourses about Hindi and English
by Priti Sandhu
Applied Linguistics (2014) 35 (1)
Willingness to Communicate and Cross-cultural Adaptation: L2 Communication and Acculturative Stress as Transaction
by H. Colin Gallagher
Applied Linguistics (2013) 34 (1)
Aims
Applied Linguistics publishes research into language with relevance to real-world problems.
The journal is keen to help make connections between fields, theories, research methods, and scholarly discourses, and welcomes contributions which critically reflect on current practices in applied linguistic research. It promotes scholarly and scientific discussion of issues that unite or divide scholars in applied linguistics. It is less interested in the ad hoc solution of particular problems and more interested in the handling of problems in a principled way by reference to theoretical studies.
Applied linguistics is viewed not only as the relation between theory and practice, but also as the study of language and language-related problems in specific situations in which people use and learn languages. Within this framework the journal welcomes contributions in such areas of current enquiry as: bilingualism and multilingualism; computer-mediated communication; conversation analysis; corpus linguistics; critical discourse analysis; deaf linguistics; discourse analysis and pragmatics; first and additional language learning, teaching, and use; forensic linguistics; language assessment; language planning and policies; language for special purposes; lexicography; literacies; multimodal communication; rhetoric and stylistics; and translation. The journal welcomes both reports of original research and conceptual articles.
The Journal’s Forum section is intended to enhance debate between authors and the
wider community of applied linguists (see Editorial in 22/1) and affords a quicker
turnaround time for short pieces. Forum pieces are typically responses to a published article, a shorter research note or report, or a commentary on research issues or professional practices. The Journal also contains a Reviews section.
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