Alison Mackey is alinguist who specializes in applied linguistics, second language acquisition and research methodology and is one of the most highly cited scholars in the world in these areas.[5][6]
Since 1998, Alison Mackey has been a professor atGeorgetown University.[7] Since 2012 she has been a researcher during the summers in the Department of Linguistics and English Language atLancaster University. Since 2020 Mackey has been Chair of the Department of Linguistics at Georgetown.
Since 2014, Alison Mackey has been the Editor-in-Chief of theCambridge University Press journal,Annual Review of Applied Linguistics.[8]
Since 2014, Mackey has been a co-founder of IRIS (the Instruments for Second Language Research digital repository).[9]
Since 2000, she has been also a series editor of theRoutledge Second Language Acquisition Research series and since 2015 of the accompanying Taylor and Francis Handbooks in SLA series.[10]
Mackey has published two articles inThe Guardian, one suggesting that different types and levels of motivation might be one key to second language learning, and a cognitively-oriented follow-up piece onWhat happens in the brain when you learn a language?.[11]
Mackey has published a book for a general audience,The Bilingual Edge: Why, when and how to teach a child second language (HarperCollins, with Kendall King).
Mackey's most cited book is "Second language research: methodology and design" (withSusan M. Gass)[12] and her most cited journal article isConversational Interaction and Second Language Development: Recasts, Responses, and Red Herrings? (with Jenefer Philp), published inThe Modern Language Journal in 1998.[13] One of her most important contributions to the research methodology area is her second most highly cited book "Stimulated recall methodology in second language research," which established this data collection approach as a key part of the second language research area.
Mackey, A., Bryfonski, L., Ku, Y. (2024). Research methods for IDs and TBLT: A methodological review.
Mackey, A., Cook, K. L., & Fell, E. (in press). Open Science and research materials. In L. Plonsky (Ed.),Open science in applied linguistics. John Benjamins.
Mackey, A. & Bryfonski, L. (2022). Output in language learning: Why it’s important and ways to promote it in person and online.Elements Journal.
Mackey, A., Fell, E., de Jesus, F., Hall, A., & Ku, Y. Y. (2022). Social justice in applied linguistics: Making space for new approaches and new voices.Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 42, 1–10.
Mackey, A., Gass, S. M., Fell, E., & Sagdic, A. (2022). The interaction approach and individual differences factors in SLA. In S. Li (Ed.),The Routledge handbook of second language acquisition and individual differences (pp. 13–14). Routledge.
Doughty, C. J. & Mackey, A. (2021). Language aptitude: Multiple perspectives.Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 40, 1–5.
Mackey, A. (2020) Navigating graduate school and academia: Key questions and answers. In L. Plonsky (Ed.),Professional development in applied linguistics: A guide to success for graduate students and early career faculty (pp. 21–40). John Benjamins.
Mackey, A. (2020). The Annual Review of Applied Linguistics at 40: Looking back and moving ahead.Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 40, 1–8.
Mackey, A., Bryfonski, L., Parlak, O., Pipes, A. Sagdic, A, Suh, B-R. (2020). Tools to measure feedback’s effectiveness. In H. Nassaji & E. Kartchava (Eds.).The Cambridge Handbook of Corrective Feedback in Language Learning and Teaching. Cambridge University Press.
Ziegler, N. & Mackey A. (2020). Interactional research and corpora: The intersection of interaction and corpus research. In N. Tracy-Ventura & M. Paquot (Eds.),The Routledge handbook of second language acquisition and corpora. Routledge.
Heift, T., Mackey, A., & Smith, B. (2019) History, pedagogy, data and new directions: An introduction to the educational technology issue.Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 39, 1–7.
Abbuhl, R., Ziegler, N., Mackey, A., & Amoroso, L. (2018). Interaction and learning grammar. In J. I. Liontas (Ed.),The TESOL Encyclopedia of English Language Teaching. Wiley Blackwell.
Bryfonski, L. & Mackey, A. (2018). Interaction in study abroad settings. In C. Sanz & A. Morales-Front (Eds.).The Routledge Handbook of Study Abroad Research and Practice. Routledge.
Mackey, A. & Bryfonski, L. (2018) Mixed Methodology. In A. Phakiti, P. De Costa, L. Plonsky & S. Starfield (Eds.),The Palgrave Handbook of Applied Linguistics Research Methodology. Palgrave Macmillan.
Philp, J., Borowcyk, M. & Mackey, A. (2017). Exploring the Uniqueness of Child Second Language Acquisition (SLA): Learning, Teaching, Assessment, and Practice.The Annual Review of Applied Linguistics. 37, 1-13
King, K., & Mackey, A. (2016). Research methodology in second language studies: Trends, concerns and new directions. Article selected forThe Modern Language Journal 100th Anniversary Edition, 209–227.
Bygate, M., Gass, S., Mackey, A., Oliver, R., & Robinson, P. (2016). Theory, empiricism and practice: Commentary on TBLT in ARAL 2016.Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, 36, 1-9.
Mackey, A. (2015). Methodological practice and progression in second language research methods.AILA Review 7(1), 80–97.
McDonough, K., Crawford, W., & Mackey, A. (2015). Creativity and EFL students’ language use during a group problem-solving task.TESOL Quarterly.
Mackey, A. (2014). Exploring questions of balance in interaction research. In J, Hulstijn, R, Young, & L, Ortega (Eds.). Bridging the gap: Cognitive and social approaches to research in language learning and teaching.Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 36(3).
Mackey, A., & Sachs, R. (2012). Older learners in SLA research: A first look at working memory, feedback, and L2 development.Language Learning, 62(3), 704–740.
Mackey, A., Adams, R., Stafford, C., & Winke, P. (2010). Exploring the relationship between modified output and working memory capacity.Language Learning, 60, 501–533.
Mackey, A., Al-Khalil, M., Atanassova, G., Hama, M., Logan-Terry, A. & Nakatsukasa, K. (2007). Teachers’ intentions and learners’ perceptions about corrective feedback in the L2 classroom.Innovations in Language Learning and Teaching, 1(1), 129–152.
Mackey, A., Kanganas, A., & Oliver, R. (2007). Task familiarity and interactional feedback in child ESL classrooms.TESOL Quarterly, 41(2), 285–312.
Carpenter, H., Jeon, S., MacGregor, D., & Mackey, A. (2006). Learners’ interpretations of recasts.Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 28(2), 209–236.
Gass, S. M., & Mackey, A. (2006). Input, interaction and output: An overview.AILA Review, 19, 3–17.
Mackey, A. (2006). Feedback, noticing and instructed second language learning.Applied Linguistics, 27 (3), 405–430. ∗ Cited over 500 times (Google Scholar)
Mackey, A. (2006). From introspections, brain scans, and memory tests to the role of social context: Advancing research on interaction and learning (Epilogue).Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 28(2), 369–379.
McDonough, K., & Mackey, A. (2006). Responses to recasts: Repetitions, primed production and linguistic development.Language Learning, 56(4) 693–720.
Mackey, A., & Gass, S. M. (2006). Pushing the methodological boundaries in interaction research: An introduction to the special issue.Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 28 (2), 169–178.
Philp. J., Oliver, R., & Mackey, A. (2006). The impact of planning time on children's task-based interactions.System, 34(4), 547–565.
Gass, S. M., Mackey, A., & Ross-Feldman, L. (2005). Task-based interactions in classroom and laboratory settings.Language Learning, 55, 575–611.
Mackey, A., & Silver, R. (2005). Interactional tasks and English L2 learning by immigrant children in Singapore.System, 33(2), 239–360.
Mackey, A., Polio, C., & McDonough, K. (2004). The relationship between experience, edu- cation, and teachers’ use of incidental focus-on-form techniques.Language Teaching Research, 8(3), 301–327.
Mackey, A., Oliver, R., & Leeman, J. (2003). Interactional input and the incorporation of feedback: An exploration of NSNNS and NNSNNS adult and child dyads.Language Learning, 53(1), 35–66. ∗ Cited over 300 times (Google Scholar).
Mackey, A., Gass, S. M., & McDonough, K. (2000). How do learners perceive interactional feedback.Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 22(4), 471–497. ∗ Cited over 700 times (Google Scholar); 5th most highly cited article in SSLA history.
Mackey, A., & Philp, J. (1998). Conversational interaction and second language develop- ment: Recasts, responses, and red herrings?.The Modern Language Journal, 82(3), 338–356. ∗ Cited over 1000 times (Google Scholar).
^Mackey, Alison; Philp, Jenefer (1998). "Conversational Interaction and Second Language Development: Recasts, Responses, and Red Herrings?".The Modern Language Journal.82 (3):338–356.doi:10.1111/j.1540-4781.1998.tb01211.x.ISSN1540-4781.