Humor, language, and pedagogy: An introduction to this special issue

Autores/as

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21283/2376905X.5.80

Resumen

Despite much research on the role of humor in the L2 classroom (see Bell, 2017; Bell & Pomerantz, 2016 for reviews), the conclusion of several major meta-analyses of the field of humor and teaching (Martin, Preiss, Gayle, & Allen, 2006; Banas, Dunbar, Rodriguez, & Liu, 2011; McMorris, Boothroyd, & Pietrangelo, 1997) is that, as Bell and Pomerantz (2016) plaintively put it, “it has been difficult to connect the use of humor to increased learning” (p. 101). The reason behind that difficulty is, as Martin et al. (2006,) state: “Although students report enjoying learning and they report that they believe they have learned course material, objective measurements of the recall associated with humorous lectures are rather minuscule” (p. 305). Banas et al. strike a marginally more optimistic note, concluding that "the empirical evidence for the effects of humor on learning is considerably more mixed, with some scholars finding that humor enhances learning (. . .) and others finding no relationship between learning from humor” (2011, p. 131).

Biografía

Salvatore Attardo, Texas A&M University-Commerce

Salvatore Attardo completó sus estudios en Università Cattolica de Milán y Purdue University. Ha publicado extensivamente sobre pragmática, semántica y lingüística del humor, principalmente acerca de implicaturas, ironía y pragmática neogriceana. Ha sido el editor jefe de la revista HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research durante 10 añosyha editado la Encyclopedia of Humor Studies (SAGE, 2014) y The Routledge Handbook of Language and Humor (2017).

Publicado

2016-12-31

Cómo citar

Attardo, S. (2016). Humor, language, and pedagogy: An introduction to this special issue. EuroAmerican Journal of Applied Linguistics and Languages, 3(2), 1–2. https://doi.org/10.21283/2376905X.5.80

Número

Sección

Introducción a número monográfico

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