こにしき(言葉・日本社会・教育)

関西学院大学(2016.04~)の寺沢拓敬のブログです(専門:言語社会学)。

FYI: Call For Papers: 外国語教育史研究に関する国際会議

転載します。
外国語教育の歴史研究に興味をお持ちの方に。

Reminder: Call for papers (deadline 1st December 2013)

Connecting cultures? An international conference on the history of teaching and learning foreign/second languages, 1500-2000


University of Nottingham July 2-5 2014


This conference will be the first in the United Kingdom dedicated to the history of modern language teaching and learning. We invite submissions for papers on any aspect of the history of foreign/second language teaching and/or learning. Comparative approaches, exploring commonalities and differences between different language teaching traditions, and/or between different countries, are particularly welcome.


The keynote speakers will be Michael Byram (Professor Emeritus, University of Durham), Giovanni Iamartino (Professor, University of Milan) and Marcus Reinfried (Professor, University of Jena)


We warmly welcome proposals for papers and themed panels (minimum of three papers) on any aspect of the history of teaching and/or learning languages.


Please send abstracts of around 300 words (and proposals for themed panels) to historyofmfl@nottingham.ac.uk by December 1, 2013. The conference languages are English, French and German, but papers are welcome on the history of teaching/learning any language.


Funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (Research Network project (2012-14) 'Towards a History of Modern Foreign Language Teaching and Learning') and supported by the Henry Sweet Society for the History of Linguistic Ideas, SIHFLES (Societé internationale pour l'histoire du français langue étrangère ou seconde), APHELLE (Associação Portuguesa para a História do Ensino das Línguas e Literaturas Estrangeiras), CIRSIL (Centro Interuniversitario di Ricerca sulla Storia degli Insegnamenti Linguistici), PHG (Peeter Heynsgenootschap) and SEHEL (Sociedad Española para la Historia de las Enseñanzas Linguísticas)


Nicola McLelland and Richard Smith
Coordinators, AHRC Research Network Project, 'Towards a History of Modern Foreign Language Teaching and Learning': http://historyofmfl.weebly.com/index.html