ANGLES ON THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD: WRITING AND VOCABULARY IN
FOREIGN LANGUAGE ACQUISITION (Vol. 4). Dorte Albrechtsen, Kirsten
Haastrup, and Birgit Henriksen (Eds.). Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum
Press, 2004. Pp. 151. $23.00 paper.
Comprised of eight research-based chapters and one book review, this
volume brings together a compelling and unique array of research studies
on two topics of ongoing interest to second language (L2) professionals.
The volume opens with three L2 writing studies, the first two of which
draw from the same investigation of university and preuniversity English
as a second language (ESL) writers. The first chapter, “Activity
Systems for ESL Writing Improvement: Case Studies of Three Chinese and
Three Japanese Adult Learners Of English,” is co-authored by Yang,
Baba, and Cumming. Using an activity theory framework, the researchers
explore writers' perceptions of their learning intentions,
crosslinguistic relationships, vocabulary, grammar, and the role of
instruction in promoting their L2 composing skills. As the participants
progressed in their ESL writing development, their activity systems
evolved as a function of the interaction between external factors and
internal predispositions. In the second chapter, “Scaling Changes in
Learners' Goals for Writing Improvement over an ESL Course,”
Cumming, Eouanzoui, Gentil, and Yang report on an analysis of interviews
conducted with 45 preuniversity ESL writers. Their method featured dual
scaling, which showed that participants' short- and long-term goals
as students and writers remained stable over time, although the actions
taken by students to improve their writing reflected individual learning
styles.