Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall

Reflections on Computer Assisted Language Learning

Authors

  • Ray Clifford

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cj.v16i1.1-9

Keywords:

CALICO conference, keynote address

Abstract

This article is a revised version of a keynote address given by the author at CALICO '98, the fifteenth annual CALICO symposium, in San Diego, California in July 1998. CALICO wishes to thank Dr. Clifford for his keynote address at CALICO '98 and his permission to publish it here. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center.

References

Baker, K. L., Franz, A. M., Jordan, P. W., Mitamura, T., & Nyberg, E. H. (1994). Coping with ambiguity in a large-scale machine translation system. Computational Linguistics, 1, 90-94.

Bollag, B. (1997, May 16). Advances may allow computers to become translators someday. The Chronicle of Higher Education, pp. A22-A23.

Chapelle, C. A. (1998, March). Multimedia CALL: Lessons to be learned from research on Instructed SLA. Paper presented at the conference on Assessing and Advancing Technology Options for Language Learning, the University of Hawaii, National Foreign Language Resource Center. Computer-aided translations. (1994, August). Science and Technology for the Executive, pp. 1-2.

Guidelines for evaluating computer-related work in the modern languages. (1997). ADFL Bulletin, 28 (3), 50-51.

Hewitt, W. E. & Lee, R. J. (1996). Behind the language barrier, or ‘You say you were eating an orange?’ State Court Journal, 20 (1), 23-31.

Slatin, J. M., & Sharir, Y. (1996). Multimedia in cyberspace: Teaching with virtual reality. Syllabus, 10 (3), 16-20.

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Published

2013-01-14

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Clifford, R. (2013). Mirror, Mirror, on the Wall: Reflections on Computer Assisted Language Learning. CALICO Journal, 16(1), 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1558/cj.v16i1.1-9