I asked ChatGPT to summarise a recent paper by a leading, veteran researcher into vocabulary learning. I then edited the summary and inserted some further comments from my perspective. The link to the original paper is below. https://www.mdpi.com/2226-471X/9/5/160?fbclid=IwY2xjawIlhNpleHRuA2FlbQIxMAABHeKzoD89IDaOZB2O4sfoZ6ah_gYS7vbDjY9uGn2Mj-XT4wV3eI5Pi_UrXw_aem_UOW3G1VEv0roD61i56NKcw The ChatGPT summary starts here. This is an interesting paper because it represents Paul Nation trying to simplify decades of vocabulary acquisition research into a small set of general learning principles. It is less about new empirical findings than about providing a practical framework that teachers, researchers and curriculum designers can use. Paper Paul Nation (2024). Re-Thinking the Principles of (Vocabulary) Learning and Their Applications . Languages , 9(5), 160. The central argument Nation argues that successful vocabulary learning — and, indeed, much other language learning — depen...
Apart the book I wrote for Routledge, Becoming an Outstanding Languages Teacher, all the other books I’ve written, or co-written with Gianfranco Conti (and recently Steve Glover) have been independently published through the Amazon platform called KDP (Kindle Direct Publishing). There have been some good reasons for doing this. 1. If you are already well known to teachers by reputation or on social media you are not building a reputation from scratch so you can market your work without a publisher. Both Gianfranco and I had already been blogging and writing language teaching resources before we wrote The Language Teacher Toolkit in 2016. This is, by the way, still our best selling book, now in its second edition. 2. Royalties are a lot higher with KDP than with a publisher. A typical publisher may offer you 10% for an education book. With KDP the royalty is up to 70%. That is a huge difference, especially if you are co-authoring. While the main reason for writing teach...