Curriculum Vitaes

Richard S. Pinner

  (ピナー リチャード)

Profile Information

Affiliation
Associate Professor, Faculty of Humanities, Department of English Literature, Sophia University
Degree
PhD Applied Linguistics(Sep, 2017, University of Warwick)
MA Applied Linguistics and ELT(Sep, 2010, King's College London)
Art and English Literature(Sep, 2003, University of Leeds)

Contact information
rpinnersophia.ac.jp
Other name(s) (e.g. nickname)
Richard S Pinner
Researcher number
50742920
ORCID ID
 https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7920-7765
J-GLOBAL ID
201301096499286404
Researcher ID
M-2911-2013
researchmap Member ID
7000004643

External link

I teach language specialist topics within the department of English literature, especially focusing on language education and teaching English as a foreign language. I also work with the graduate school of linguistics on the Master's Degree in Teaching English as a Second Language.

(Subject of research)
Authenticity and Motivation in language teaching and learning


Major Research History

 13

Major Awards

 4

Major Papers

 46
  • Richard J Sampson, Richard S Pinner
    The Routledge Handbook of Language Teacher Action Research, 219.0-228.0, Dec 2, 2024  Peer-reviewed
  • Richard S. Pinner
    Cambridge Handbooks in Language and Linguistics, Oct, 2024  Peer-reviewedInvitedLead author
  • Richard Pinner
    Soft CLIL and English Language Teaching, 103.0-120.0, Aug 24, 2021  Lead author
  • Makoto Ikeda, Richard Pinner
    Soft CLIL and English Language Teaching, 1.0-8.0, Aug 24, 2021  
  • Darío Luis Banegas, Richard S. Pinner, Ignacio Daniel Larrondo
    TESOL Quarterly, 56.0(2) 445.0-473.0, Aug 4, 2021  Peer-reviewed
    Abstract This article describes the professional identity formation of a group of pre‐service English as a foreign language student‐teachers at an initial English language teacher education program in Argentina. To this effect, a four‐year longitudinal study was designed drawing on the concept of funds of identity. Participants’ drawing of significant circles and interviews were used to document the main components of their funds of professional identity and the factors which informed their construction. In this paper, we specifically describe three student‐teachers’ funds of professional identity to exemplify three trends identified across the participants: (1) knowledge as a constant fund, (2) a shift from past to present and future funds, and (3) a shift from external to internal funds. Drawing on Esteban‐Guitart’s (2014) typology of funds of identity, this study puts forward a typology of funds of professional identity which incorporates three new funds, valuative, disciplinary, and anticipatory, to understand student‐teachers’ trajectories in language teacher education.
  • Darío Luis Banegas, Richard S. Pinner
    The Psychological Experience of Integrating Content and Language, 266-282, Jan 1, 2021  Peer-reviewed
  • Richard S. Pinner, Richard J. Sampson
    TESOL Quarterly, 55.0(2) 633.0-642.0, Jul 2, 2020  Peer-reviewedLead author
    Humanizing complexity research is already strongly advocated by much of the literature on complexity (Kramsch, 2011; Larsen‐Freeman, 2011; Sampson, 2016) and yet there is a recent trend towards a potentially alienating approach, which could confound readers, utilising a dense vocabulary and overly technical methods. We advocate a more practical approach to complexity thinking, which continues on from McKinley’s (2019) paper on the teaching‐research nexus by advocating more practitioner‐based research which can provide emic and contextually situated insights into the language classroom.
  • Richard S. Pinner
    Educational Action Research, 26(1) 91-105, Apr 10, 2017  Peer-reviewedLead author

Major Books and Other Publications

 5

Major Presentations

 6
  • Richard S. Pinner
    ELT Research In Action Conference, May, 2024, University of Barcelona  Invited

Works

 1
  • RS Pinner
    Nov 24, 2024 Artistic work
    The Bad Boys in the Attic is the debut novel from Richard Pinner. Childhood fears, left unconfronted, wait and grow in the dark. Olly’s life is normal. Except for the voices in the attic. Cruel, taunting, and far too real. As he grows from a boy clutching a tattered security blanket to a father struggling to protect his own child, the shadows of his past refuse to let go. Time slips and bends like a dream as Olly confronts what lurks in the attic. He must learn to face his fears, both the physical and the emotional. Through the shifting sands of memory and time, The Bad Boys in the Attic explores the generational echoes of trauma, the blurred line between reality and imagination, and the courage it takes to face the shadows within.

Research Projects

 2

Academic Activities

 5
  • Supervision (editorial), Review, evaluation
    International Association for the Psychology of Language Learning (IAPLL), Jun 1, 2024 - Jun 30, 2026
  • Panel moderator, Session chair, etc.
    Sophia University FD Committee (EMI Working Group) (Sophia University), Sep 15, 2023 - Sep 15, 2023
    Delivered the main lecture in a university-wide Faculty Development session organized by Sophia University's FD Committee (EMI WG). The session focused on practical strategies for promoting student autonomy and effective blended learning using ICT tools such as Padlet, Flip, and voice-to-text platforms.
  • Peer review
    Wiley International, 2020
  • Panel moderator, Session chair, etc.
    Sophia University FD Committee, Jul 18, 2018 - Jul 18, 2018
  • Peer review
    Science Direct, 2018

Social Activities

 10