Hugh Trappes-Lomax works at Edinburgh University's Institute for Applied Language Studies, where he is Deputy Director with particular responsibility for research. His main professional interests are in discourse analysis, English grammar and usage, and language in education, especially in Africa. He is the author of the Oxford Learner's Wordfinder Dictionary.
Hugh Trappes-Lomax: Introduction
1 Gillian Brown: Changing Views of Language in Applied Linguistics
2 Michael Stubbs: Society, Education and Language: The Last 2000 (and the Next 20?) Years of Language Teaching
3 Malcolm J. Benson: The Secret Life of Grammar-translation
4 Susan Gass: Changing Views of Language Learning
5 Florence Myles: Change and Continuity in Second Language Acquisition Research
6 Martin Gill: Rethinking Interactive Models of Reading
7 Ben Rampton: Continuity and Change in Views of Society in Applied Linguistics
8 Mairian Corker: Talking Disability: The Quiet Revolution in Language Change
9 Bernard McKenna: Critical Discourse Method of Field: Tracking the Ideological Shift in Australian Labor Governments 1983-1986
10 Alison Piper and Charmian Kenner: 'Risk is the Mobilising Dynamic of a Society Bent on Change': How Metaphors Help to Stabilise the Developing Discourse of the Learning Society and How they Don't
11 Almut Josepha Koester: The Role of Idioms in Negotiating Workplace Encounters
12 Tan Bee Tin: Looking at Changes from the Learner's Point of View: An Analysis of Group Interaction Patterns in Cross-cultural Settings
Contributors