Dr Florencia G. Henshaw is the Director of Advanced Spanish at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Maris D. Hawkins teaches Spanish at the Capitol Hill Day School in Washington, D.C.
"There is so much to know and to consider when learning to teach a
language, and Common Ground presents, in a straightforward and
simplified way, the most important concepts, based on SLA research.
Students are more likely to retain and apply this important
information when it is presented concisely, with many specific
examples, as it is in this book. Common Ground has a logical
organization that is easy to follow, both in terms of chapter order
and the sequencing of information and activities within each
chapter. The content is accurate, current, concise, readable, and
easy to understand. The number of sample activities in the second
half of each chapter is wonderful—they serve to illustrate the
concepts in the first half of the chapter and provide
students/teachers with a wealth of ideas that they will be able to
adapt and use in their own classrooms. The companion website will
be a great resource and a good way to update the book more
regularly than producing subsequent editions, especially with
respect to tech tools, webinars on teaching with technology, etc. I
will definitely adopt this book into my courses; I think others
will too, because of the high quality of the authors’ work, the
conciseness of their writing, the numerous useful examples, and the
low cost of the book to students."
—Tammy Jandrey Hertel, University of Lynchburg, and author of El
cine documental: Spanish Language and Culture through Documentary
Film (Hackett, 2015)
"Henshaw and Hawkins offer a forward-thinking approach to find the
'common ground' through the very heart of language teaching:
principled-based, well-informed tasks to create effective learning
experiences. Explaining how SLA is translated into materials is
perhaps one of the most effective ways to empower teachers. The
authors have nailed it!"
—Claudia R. Fernández, University of Illinois Chicago
"Henshaw and Hawkins’s Common Ground is a delight! The authors
distill SLA's big ideas down into bite-sized chunks, then provide
concrete suggestions and examples to help teachers implement these
ideas in the classroom. This book’s conversational tone and
practical advice set it apart, making it accessible and informative
for preservice teachers and veteran teachers alike. In short, if
you’re a language teacher—or even a soon-to-be one—Common Ground
merits a spot in your professional library."
—AnneMarie Chase, Douglas High School, Nevada
"This text is short and concise. It is organized in a manner that
facilitates either a quick read or a more in depth one. The tone of
the text is engaging; it is humorous and relatable, and hard to put
down. If your goal is to develop learners’ proficiency, this text
provides a roadmap to help get them there. If the goal is to train
future language teachers, this book should be a required text for
that course. If the goal is to improve or move to a
proficiency-based curriculum, this is the book to read. It gives us
language and research so we can more successfully advocate for
curricular changes that will get learners speaking the target
language. A colleague recently expressed that reading the book
helped them to understand that the changes we are discussing are
coming from a place of research and understanding. This is an
excellent book and I highly recommend it to anyone involved in
language learning experiences."
—Amanda Romjue, Emory & Henry College, for The
FLTMAG
"I have every expectation that [Common Ground: Second Language
Acquisition Goes to the Classroom] will become a standard resource
for Latin and Greek teachers who wish to start (and deepen) their
engagement with SLA.
"In sum, this is a remarkable book. In under 200
pages, it introduces the language educator to the very best of the
available SLA research, provides helpful, practical, ready-made
classroom strategies, tasks, and assessments for the practicing
world language educator, and asks each of us to reflect carefully
on what we’re learning. It asks us to ask some of the most
fundamental questions about language instruction and why we do it.
It is a perfect complement to conversations that have been
occurring in Classical languages for decades."
—Evan Dutmer, Culver Academies, in Journal of Classics Teaching
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