This book provides a blended approach in outlining the properties of
grammatical knowledge that have been causing difficulty to Chinese
speaking learners, including tense and aspect, articles, passives,
unaccusatives, plurality and motion verbs. It explains from different
linguistics perspectives how these constraints/difficulties might be
dealt with. It also offers readers a comprehensive account of these
problems, and outlines the possible pedagogical solutions teachers can
try in the classroom. These topics are selected because they bring
substantial challenges and difficulties to Chinese English as a Second
Language (ESL) learners. This book bridges the gap between acquisition
theory and language pedagogy research, benefiting not just language
learners but language teachers around the world, and all those who would
like to witness collaboration between second language acquisition theory
and second language teaching practice in general. It initiates future
work in which researchers from different fields with diverging
theoretical perspectives and methodological approaches will be able to
develop studies that are compatible with each other. This overall can
facilitate our understanding of second language acquisition, and how
instruction might help.