Linguistics
1.  History of  the  term :
  The  term Applied  Linguistics (AL) is an Anglo-American  coinage. -  Language  Learning  Journal,  published  from  University  of  Mechegan  in  1948,  was  „the  first journal  in  the  world  to  carry  the  term  “applied  linguistics”  in  its  title‟  (Language  Learning 1967:1). -  It  was founded first at the  University  of Edinburgh School of Applied  Linguistics in 1956. -  Then at the  Center of  Applied  Linguistics in Washington D.C. in 1957. -  AL  use  was  propagated  by  those  who  clearly  wanted  to  be  known  as  scientists  and  not  as humanists.   -  The  label  „applied  linguistics‟  was  misleading  as  it  exludes  many  disciplines  bearing  on language  teaching  such  as psychology  and  educational theories. -   AL in the  past based itself on the findings of theoretical linguistics.
 I.2.  Linguistics :
Linguistics  is  the  scientific  study  of  language.  Linguists  do  work  on  specific  languages,  but their  primary  goal is to understand the nature  of  Language  in  general.   •  Linguistics deals with the  study  of  particular languages, and  the search for  general properties common to all languages  or large  groups of languages. •  Linguistics  is  primarily  concerned  with  the  nature  of  language  and  communication.  There are  broadly  three  aspects  to  the  study,  including  language  form,  language  meaning,  and language  use in discursive  and communicative  contexts. 
Linguistics  is  essential  to  applied  linguistics,  but  is  not  the      only  discipline  that  contributes  to it.  Semantics Pragmatic s Linguistic s Phonology Syntax
 I.3. What  is Interdisciplinary Linguistics? 
Morpholog y Sociolinguisti cs Interdisciplinary  studies  involve  two  or  more  academic  disciplines  that  are  considered distinct.  The  most  common  interdisciplinary  branches  of  Linguistics  are:  •  Sociolinguistics,  • Psycholinguistics,  •  Ethnolinguistics  or  Anthropological  Linguistics,  •  Computational Linguistics, • Neurolinguistics. I.4. Applied  Linguistics  Vs.  Linguistics  Applied Davis  and  Elder  (2006:9)  commented  on  Widdowson‟s  distinction  between  Linguistics Applied (LA)  and Applied  Linguistics (AL) thus:    The  differences  between  these  modes  of  intervention  is  that  in  the  case  of  linguistics  applied, the  assumption  is  that  the  problem  can  be  reformulated  by  the  direct  and  unilateral  application of    concepts  and  terms  deriving  from  linguistic  enquiry  itself.  That  is  to  say,  language problems  are  amenable  to  linguistic  solutions.  In  the  case  of  applied  linguistics,  intervention is  crucially  a  matter  of  mediation…applied  linguistics…has  to  relate  and  reconcile  different representations  of  reality,  including  that  of  linguistics  without  excluding  others.  (Widdowson, 2000, p.5). Davis  and  Elder  (2006)  believe  that  AL  looks  outwards  beyond  language  in  an  attempt  to explain and solve  social problems while linguistics applied looks  inward not to solve  language problems  in  the  real  world,  but  to  explicate  and  test  theories  about  language  itself.  To  them, this  means  that  LA  uses  language  data  to  develop  our  linguistic  knowledge  about  language while AL  studies a language  problem with the  intention of  correcting  them  (2006, p.  09).    Linguistics  is  essential  to  applied  linguistics,  but  is  not  the      only  discipline  that  contributes  to it.  Semantics Pragmatic s Linguistic s Phonology Syntax 
I.3. What  is Interdisciplinary Linguistics? 
Morpholog y Sociolinguisti cs Interdisciplinary  studies  involve  two  or  more  academic  disciplines  that  are  considered distinct.  The  most  common  interdisciplinary  branches  of  Linguistics  are:  •  Sociolinguistics,  • Psycholinguistics,  •  Ethnolinguistics  or  Anthropological  Linguistics,  •  Computational Linguistics, • Neurolinguistics. I.4. Applied  Linguistics  Vs.  Linguistics  Applied Davis  and  Elder  (2006:9)  commented  on  Widdowson‟s  distinction  between  Linguistics Applied (LA)  and Applied  Linguistics (AL) thus:    The  differences  between  these  modes  of  intervention  is  that  in  the  case  of  linguistics  applied, the  assumption  is  that  the  problem  can  be  reformulated  by  the  direct  and  unilateral  application of    concepts  and  terms  deriving  from  linguistic  enquiry  itself.  That  is  to  say,  language problems  are  amenable  to  linguistic  solutions.  In  the  case  of  applied  linguistics,  intervention is  crucially  a  matter  of  mediation…applied  linguistics…has  to  relate  and  reconcile  different representations  of  reality,  including  that  of  linguistics  without  excluding  others.  (Widdowson, 2000, p.5). Davis  and  Elder  (2006)  believe  that  AL  looks  outwards  beyond  language  in  an  attempt  to explain and solve  social problems while linguistics applied looks  inward not to solve  language problems  in  the  real  world,  but  to  explicate  and  test  theories  about  language  itself.  To  them, this  means  that  LA  uses  language  data  to  develop  our  linguistic  knowledge  about  language while AL  studies a language  problem with the  intention of  correcting  them  (2006, p.  09).   
I.5. Restricting the  Scope -  The  limitation  of  the  scope  of  AL  to  language  teaching  mattered  at  this  period  because  after the 2nd   World War the  expansion  of language  teaching (especially  of Eng)  revealed  that many teachers and trainers and  supervisors of teachers lacked knowledge  about language. -  That  gap is what applied linguistics was set up to fill. At  that  time  applied  linguistics  had  been  successful.  Its  dedication  to  language  teaching  had been  remarked  in  other  areas  of  language  use,  especially  institutional  language  use  (Howatt 1984),  leading  to  an  explosion  of  applied  linguistics  training,  methodology  and,  perhaps above  all, labelling  in those  other  areas. 
I.6. Definitions  of  AL Applied  linguistics:
It  does  not  lend  itself  to  an  easy  definition,  perhaps  because,  as  Vivian  Cook remarks: „Applied  Linguistics means many  things  to many  people‟ (Cook 2006). Applied  Linguistics  is  an  interdisciplinary  field  of  inquiry  that  addresses  a  broad  range  of language-related  issues  in  order  to  understand  their  roles  in  the  lives  of  individuals  and conditions  in  society.  It  draws  on  a  wide  range  of  theoretical  and  methodological  approaches from  various  disciplines–from  the  humanities  to  the  social  and  natural  sciences–as  it  develops its  own  knowledge-base  about  language,  its  users  and  uses,  and  their  underlying  social  and material conditions. The  application  of  linguistic  knowledge  to  real-world  problems  …  whenever  knowledge about  language  is  used  to  solve  a  basic  language-related  problem,  we  may  say  that  applied linguistics  is  being  practiced.  Applied  is  a  technology  which  makes  abstract  ideas  and research  findings  accessible  and  relevant  to  the  real  world;  it  mediates  between  theory  and practice  (Kaplan and Widdowson, 1992, p.  76);   „The  task  of  applied  linguistics  is  to  mediate‟  between  linguistics  and  language  use  (Cook 2003: 20). A synthesis of  research  from a variety  of disciplines, including  linguistics (Hudson 1999); „The  academic  discipline  concerned  with  the  relation  of  knowledge  about  language  to decision making  in the  real world‟ (Cook 2003, p.  5). 
 
 
 
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