159 Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching Department of English Studies, Faculty of Pedagogy and Fine Arts, Adam Mickiewicz University, Kalisz SSLLT 3 (2). 159-160 http://www.ssllt.amu.edu.pl Editorial The present issue of Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching brings together six papers, all of which report the findings of original research related to different aspects of learning and teaching foreign languages. In the first contribution, Sarah Mercer discusses the value of language learner histo- ries for teachers, learners themselves and researchers as well as demonstrat- ing the potential of such learner-generated narratives basing on the data ob- tained from first year university students in Austria attending a general English course. In the next paper, Thomas Lockley reports the results of a study which tapped the relationship between speaking self-perceived communication competence and actual speaking proficiency over the course of an academic year in the case of university level Japanese learners of English, illuminates factors that might be responsible for the inaccuracy of the participants’ self- evaluation and offers guidelines on how such self-assessment could be im- proved. Subsequently, Parisa Abdolrezapour, Mansoor Tavakoli and Saeed Ketabi make an attempt to introduce changes to Iranian learners’ emotional intelligence through the application of what is referred to as emotionalized dynamic assessment and provide evidence that such an intervention results in an increase in reading comprehension ability as well as the growth of emo- tional intelligence as such. In the next paper, emphasis is shifted to the use of communication strategies, with Stuart Benson, Danielle Fischer, Joe Geluso and Lucius Von Joo showing that training Japanese university level students in the use of clarifying/confirming and extending a conversation led to more fre- quent reliance on such strategies but failed to produce an increase in conver- sation skills, a finding that is attributed to the specificity of the educational context in which the study was conducted. The last two contributions to this issue are devoted to empirical investigations of the use of target language subsystems. First, Mahmoud S. Al Mahmoud reports the findings of a study which explored American learners’ ability to discriminate consonant contrasts 160 in Arabic, providing partial support for Best’s (1995) perceptual assimilation model. Second, Monica Karlsson examines quantitative and qualitative aspects of the comprehension of idioms in the mother tongue (Swedish) and a second language (English), offering evidence that the frequency of occurrence of idi- omatic expressions in the input is less important that the degree of transpar- ency or the context in which a particular idiomatic phrase is used. I believe that all of these papers will be of interest to wide audiences and provide inspi- ration for future research endeavors in the learning and teaching of second and foreign languages in a variety of contexts. Miros aw Pawlak Adam Mickiewicz University, Poland pawlakmi@amu.edu.pl References Best, C. T. (1995). A direct realist view on cross-language speech perception. In W. Strange (Ed.), Speech perception and linguistic experience (pp. 171- 204). Timonium, MD: York.