Kenneth W. Mildenberger Prize

The Kenneth W. Mildenberger Prize is an annual prize given to a translator by the Modern Language Association.

Eligibility

The 2017 prize will be awarded for a book published in 2015 or 2016.[1]

Notable winners

Past winners of the prize include:[2]

2013–14 - James P. Lantolf, Penn State University, and Matthew E. Poehner, Penn State University, for Sociocultural Theory and the Pedagogical Imperative in L2 Education: Vygotskian Praxis and the Research/Practice Divide

2011–12 - Susan M. Gass, Michigan State University, and Alison Mackey, Georgetown University, editors, for The Routledge Handbook of Second Language Acquisition

2010 - Norman Segalowitz, Concordia University, for Cognitive Bases of Second Language Fluency (

2009 - Claire Kramsch, University of California, Berkeley, for The Multilingual Subject: What Foreign Language Learners Say about Their Experience and Why It Matters

2008 - Diane Larsen-Freeman, University of Michigan, and Lynne Cameron, Open University, for Complex Systems and Applied Linguistics

2007 - B. Kumaravadivelu, San José State University, for Cultural Globalization and Language Education

2006 - Penny McKay, Queensland University of Technology, for Assessing Young Language Learners

2005 - Cristina Sanz, editor, Georgetown University, for Mind and Context in Adult Second Language Acquisition: Methods, Theory, and Practice

2004 - Paul Seedhouse, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, for The Interactional Architecture of the Language Classroom: A Conversation Analysis Perspective

2003 - Janina Brutt-Griffler, University of York, for World English: A Study of Its Development

References

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