Mosaicos: Spanish as a World Language, 7th edition
Published by Pearson (March 29, 2019) © 2020
- Elizabeth E. Guzmán University of Iowa
- Paloma E. Lapuerta Central Connecticut State University
- Judith E. Liskin-Gasparro University of Iowa
For courses in Elementary Spanish
A communicative program that places culture front and center
Mosaicos: Spanish as a World Language offers instructors a truly communicative, deeply culture-focused approach, while providing the guidance and tools students need to accomplish highly communicative goals. With Mosaicos, there is no need to compromise. Recognizing the key relationship between culture and language, the authors place culture front and center throughout. As a result, students get a multifaceted experience with the Spanish language and its cultures.
The 7th Edition offers new Integrated Performance Assessments that make measuring learning outcomes easier than ever.
Hallmark features of this title
Practical, culturally engaged learning
- Promotes communicative practice with a guided, highly communicative, culturally rich approach based on solid methodological principles and years of empirical classroom experience.
- Teaches language in context with a focus on meaning.
- Integrates culture as an intrinsic part of language and the experience of language learning.
- Focuses on 4 key language skills: listening, speaking, reading, and writing.
- Highly inclusive and multi-faceted, the text allows students with a range of backgrounds and learning styles to benefit from the program and from many opportunities for communication.
- Flexible instructor and student resources make the program easy to use for F2F, hybrid, and online courses.
New and updated features of this title
- NEW: 6 new Integrated Performance Assessments (IPAs) target the 3 modes of communication: interpretive, interpersonal, and presentational.
- UPDATED: Scope and sequence updates allow smooth transitions from simple to more complex grammatical structures. In addition, students now focus on fewer grammatical structures per chapter as structures get more challenging.
- NEW: Streamlined, visually clean chapters are more easily navigated. All-new chapter opener photos orient students to the chapter theme and country/region of focus, while new contemporary images throughout more fully represent the diversity of the Spanish-speaking world.
- NEW and UPDATED: Instructor annotations have been added for activities that correlate to the ACTFL World-Readiness Standards for Learning Languages. Communicative practice activities have been added to both vocabulary and grammar sequences and revisions to the Piénsalo self-check activities (grammar in context) help link form to meaning and increase metalinguistic awareness.
- NEW and UPDATED: All audio has been revised and newly recorded and all cultural content, including Enfoque cultural (now with links to relevant Club cultura videos), Mosaico cultural, and Cultura, has been updated.
- UPDATED: Revisions to the Mosaicos skills section support student success.
- Preliminar: Bienvenidos
- ¿Qué estudias?
- ¿Quiénes son tus amigos?
- ¿Qué hacen para divertirse?
- ¿Cómo es tu familia?
- ¿Dónde vives?
- ¿Qué te gusta comprar?
- ¿Cuál es tu deporte favorito?
- ¿Cuáles son tus tradiciones?
- ¿Dónde trabajas?
- ¿Cuál es tu comida preferida?
- ¿Cómo te sientes?
- ¿Te gusta viajar?
- ¿Qué es arte para ti?
- ¿Cómo vivimos los cambios sociales?
- ¿Qué nos trae el futuro?
APPENDICES
- Stress and Written Accents in Spanish
- Verb Charts
- Spanish–English Glossary
- English–Spanish Glossary
About our authors
A native of Chile, Elizabeth Guzmán recently retired after a long teaching and administrative career. She directed Spanish language programs at several universities in the United States and supervised teachers of English in her country. Throughout her career, she designed face-to-face and flipped courses where Mosaicos, Unidos and Identidades were used, in addition to overseeing the design and implementation of online Spanish courses. She trained and mentored graduate teaching assistants and has served as a consultant to Spanish programs that were making the transition from face-to-face to flipped models of teaching. Teaching and learning have been at the center of her academic life, and she has shared her energy, passion and experience with undergraduates and graduate students. Teaching Spanish as a tool for communication to undergraduates taking Spanish courses to fulfill a requirement was one of the challenges that she undertook with love, understanding and determination during her career.
Dr. Paloma Lapuerta is from the Mediterranean city of Castellón, Spain. She holds a Licenciatura and a master's degree in Spanish Philology from the University of Salamanca, Spain, and a Ph.D. in Literature from the University of Geneva, Switzerland. She has taught at the universities of Geneva, Kwua-Zulu Natal, in Durban, South Africa, and Central Connecticut State University, where she is currently Professor of Spanish. She has also been invited to teach at the Middlebury College Spanish School, the University of Michigan, and Dartmouth College. Her research interests focus on 19th and 20th century literature and she has multiple publications on poetry and novels that deal with social and cultural issues. In addition to Mosaicos, Dr. Lapuerta is the coauthor of Unidos, Identidades, La escritura paso a paso and the author of Cortos en curso, all published by Pearson.
Judith Liskin-Gasparro (M.A. Princeton University; Ph.D., University of Texas, Austin) is Associate Professor Emerita at the University of Iowa, where she directed the Spanish language program and codirected the doctoral program in Second Language Acquisition. She taught courses in second language acquisition, applied linguistics and pedagogy and Spanish language. Her publications and presentations deal with the development of speaking skills, oral proficiency assessment and program evaluation and outcomes assessment. She is the coauthor of Unidos and Identidades, in addition to Mosaicos and she was the coeditor of Pearson's Theory and Practice in Second Language Classroom Instruction series. She was also a faculty member at Middlebury College, as well as the Middlebury College School of Spanish. While working at Educational Testing Service, she participated in the development of the ACTFL Proficiency Guidelines. She also designed and led the first oral proficiency interview workshops in the early 1980s and she was principally responsible for training the first generation of OPI testers and trainers in Spanish.
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