List of contributors
1. Space, place and autonomy in language learning: an introduction (Terry Lamb and Garold Murray)
Part 1: Urban spaces
2. Collective autonomy and multilingual spaces in super-diverse
urban contexts: interdisciplinary perspectives (Terry Lamb and
Goran Vodicka)
3. Emotion in the construction of space, place and autonomous
learning opportunities (Cynthia White and Jennifer Bown)
4. Learning a language for free: space and autonomy in adult
foreign language learning (Alice Chik)
5. The ‘English Café’ as a social learning place (Cem
Balçıkanlı)
6 Multilingual linguistic landscapes as a site for developing
learner autonomy (Antje Wilton And Christian Ludwig)
Part 2: Teacher education spaces
7. Teacher education for autonomy: case pedagogy as an empowering
interspace between reality and ideals (Manuel Jiménez Raya and
Flávia Vieira)
8 Language students designing a learning project for children: a
matter of managing multiple attention spaces (Leena Kuure)
9 Naoko’s story: one autonomous learner’s journey through time and
space (Beverly-Anne Carter)
Part 3: Classroom spaces and beyond
10 Ownership of learning spaces through humour (Mehtap
Kocatepe)
11 Creating spaces for learning: structure and agency in EST course
design (Christoph A. Hafner and Lindsay Miller)
12 Time, space and memory in the teaching and learning of English
within a Brazilian juvenile detention centre: the effect of
suspension in a confused space (Valdeni Da Silva Reis)
Part 4: Institutional spaces
13. Spaced out or zoned in? An exploratory study of spaces enabling
autonomous learning in two New Zealand tertiary learning
institutions (Moira Hobbs and Kerstin Dofs)
14. Autonomous learning support base: enhancing autonomy in a TEFL
undergraduate program (Walkyria Magno E Silva)
15. Social learning spaces and the invisible fence (Garold Murray,
Naomi Fujishima and Mariko Uzuka)
Conclusion
16. Space, place, autonomy and the road not yet taken (Garold
Murray and Terry Lamb)
Index
Garold Murray is an associate professor in the Center for Liberal Arts and Language Education at Okayama University, Japan.
Terry Lamb is a professor of languages and interdisciplinary pedagogy and head of the Westminster Centre for Teaching Innovation at the University of Westminster, London, UK.
'Our concepts and practices of time and space are socially
constructed and understood by us, not as they were a decade ago,
and not as they will a decade from now. Notions of classrooms,
learning programs and centers, and educational institutions
themselves are increasingly becoming challenged and re-imagined,
and the theories and research from this volume can help guide our
re-imaginings . . . readers will think differently of space and
place.' — Joseph Falout, Nihon University, Japan
'Our concepts and practices of time and space are socially
constructed and understood by us, not as they were a decade ago,
and not as they will a decade from now. Notions of classrooms,
learning programs and centers, and educational institutions
themselves are increasingly becoming challenged and re-imagined,
and the theories and research from this volume can help guide our
re-imaginings . . . readers will think differently of space and
place.' — Joseph Falout, Nihon University, Japan
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