AN INTRODUCTION TO APPLIED LINGUISTICS. Norbert Schmitt
(Ed.). London: Arnold, 2002. Pp. viii + 344. $72.00 cloth, $25.00
paper.
Applied linguistics is currently undergoing interesting developments
connected with new research areas and tools. At the same time, there exist
numerous introductory textbooks to various subbranches and general
overviews of the discipline. The present volume is yet another addition to
the field, covering both traditional areas and approaches as well as more
recent tendencies. In his preface, Schmitt describes the book as a
“broad overview of applied linguistics” written at “the
‘sophisticated introduction’ level” (p. vii). The book
is indeed broad in scope and sophisticatedly simple. It opens with a
concise overview of applied linguistics, followed by three major parts
devoted to the description of language and language use, major areas of
inquiry, and language skills and assessment, respectively. Part 1 covers
grammar, vocabulary, discourse analysis, pragmatics, and corpus
linguistics. Part 2 investigates SLA, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics,
and the language learner. Finally, Part 3 covers listening, speaking and
pronunciation, reading, writing, and assessment. The book concludes with
suggested solutions to the activities, references for individual chapters,
and an index. The chapters, authored by 31 leading experts, are all
organized in similar fashion, with introductory discussion and appropriate
definitions, further analyses, notes on possible implementations and
implications for language teaching and research, numerous quotations from
source literature, annotated further readings, and stimulating hands-on
activities.