Teaching Considerations for Non-Lexicalized L2 Words Seula Han Phuong Tran Shane Lanning Thomas McAlister.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Progress Monitoring. Progress Monitoring Steps  Monitor the intervention’s progress as directed by individual student’s RtI plan  Establish a baseline.
Advertisements

Planning the Development of Reading Skills Modern Languages PGCE School of Education University of Nottingham.
Jane Doe and John Smith RQ: To what extent does writing new words help high school ELLs learn vocabulary? Barcroft, J. (2004). Effects of sentence writing.
An Experimental study of Task-based L2 lexical Learning by Chinese EFL learners Zhou Weijing School of Foreign Languages Jiangsu University.
OBSERVING PEDAGOGICAL PRACTICES THAT FACILITATE NEGOTIATION FOR MEANING IN L2 CLASSES.
Comparing L1 and L2 reading
Collaborative Strategic Reading: A Model for Content Area Reading October 20, 2010Richmond Public Schools Alethia Elam Stephanie Hooks Dawn James-Cappiello.
The Effectiveness of Using Bilingual Portable Electronic Dictionaries (BPEDs) in Translation Classes Dictionaries (BPEDs) in Translation Classes Dr.Aisha.
Chapter 3 Listening for intermediate level learners Helgesen, M. & Brown, S. (2007). Listening [w/CD]. McGraw-Hill: New York.
Introduction Developing reading & writing skills for primary school
Running Records.
A STUDY ON THE KNOWLEDGE SOURCES OF TURKISH EFL LEARNERS IN LEXICAL INFERENCING İlknur İSTİFÇİ Anadolu University Eskişehir, TURKEY Eskişehir, TURKEY.
Developing Vocabulary & Enhancing Reading Comprehension SPC ED 587 October 25, 2007.
Teaching Vocabulary to advanced students:
Academic Vocabulary Instruction I.Background on learning words II.Incidental Vocabulary Acquisition III.Intentional Vocabulary Instruction IV.Unknowns.
Section VI: Comprehension Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2 nd edition.
READING – WRITING RELATIONS Are there any? 1. A GENDA The Rationale Literature Review The Purpose of the Study The Study The Research Questions The Results.
Linking Research and Practice: Effective Strategies for Teaching Vocabulary in the ESL Classroom Jihyun Nam 學生 : NA1C0014 李羿 霈.
14: THE TEACHING OF GRAMMAR  Should grammar be taught?  When? How? Why?  Grammar teaching: Any strategies conducted in order to help learners understand,
Using the SILL to Record the Language Learning Strategy Use: Suggestions for the Greek EFL Population Dr. Vassilia Kazamia-Christou Aristotle University.
The Grammar – Translation Method
Qualitative differences in teachers’ approaches to task-based teaching and learning in ESL classrooms International Conference on task-based language teaching’
ANALYZE the MEANING of LEXICAL ITEMS Thee are three ways of doing it, looking at : 1.The components of meaning of lexical items, 2.The meaning of lexical.
Collaborative Strategic Reading: A Model for Content Area Reading
Creating Meaning from the Written Word
Stacey Dahmer Dana Grant
TBLT 2005 LEUVEN Elke Peters Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Word relevance and task instruction. Do they make a difference for word retention?
Sheltered Instruction for English Language Learners Tonie Garza
UTKARSH Rashtriya Madhyamik Shiksha Abhiyan ( ) Interactive Teaching-Learning Methodology.
Academic Needs of L2/Bilingual Learners
 Background and Motivation of this Study  Statement of the Problem  Research Questions  Significance of the Study  Definition of Terms  Organization.
Overview of the Pedagogical Guidelines (2006) IST workshop, Agadir, December, 2006.
We’re not through with you yet!. Educator Enhancement Academy ELA, Grades 2 Day 2 Ashley Gunnoe – Title 1, Wirt County Carrie Cronin – 2 nd Grade Teacher,
Developing the language skills: reading Dr. Abdelrahim Hamid Mugaddam.
Claudia Yáñez. Advanced students and their needs Advanced learners can communicate well Advanced learners can communicate well Through The basics structures.
Are you ready to play…. Deal or No Deal? Deal or No Deal?
IN THE NAME OF GOD IN THE NAME OF GOD. Grammar Grammar Chapter 2 Chapter 2.
Reading Comprehension and Vocabulary Development November 3, 2005.
Strategies for Teaching Students with Learning and Behavior Problems, 8e Vaughn and Bos ISBN: © 2012, 2009, 2006 Pearson Education, Inc. All.
Developing Writing Skills in a Mixed-Language Classroom Tetyana Bidna.
Literacy Transfer Important concepts Literacy: –control of secondary uses of language; i.e., reading and writing, understanding of labels, charts, etc;
 Wiki creation  Vocabulary information and strategies  Vocabulary work on Text Set Project  EQs- How can a web based resource for content reading support.
Interactive Lecture 2: Discourse, Competency, Proficiency and the Implications for Methodology Dr. Douglas Fleming Faculty of Education.
NUR ATIKAH BINTI NOOR RASHID P73945 PROF.DR MOHAMED AMIN BIN EMBI.
ELL353 Welcome to Week #3 Dr. Holly Wilson. This Week’s Assignments 1. Readings 2. Discussion #1: Teaching Vocabulary 3. Discussion #2: Vocabulary Lesson.
Language Learning Strategies by Successful Language Learners Maryam A’dilla Binti Zainudin P GGGE 6533.
What helps us to learn new vocabulary?. Finding meaning 1. The teacher sends us to look up the word in a dictionary 2. The teacher provides the meaning.
SUCCESSFUL ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNING INVENTORY NAME: PRISHEELA MUNIANDY Prof. Dr. MOHAMED AMIN BIN EMBI.
Hossein Nassaji: L2 Vocabulary Learning From Context: Strategies, Knowledge Sources, and Their Relationship With Success in L2 Lexical Inferencing.
Issues in teaching. 1.It helps you remember if you learn items in lexical sets (e.g. colors, animals). 2.‘Inferencing’ (guessing from context) is the.
Vocabulary Acquisition in a Second Language: Do Learners Really Acquire Most Vocabulary by Reading? Some Empirical Evidence Batia Laufer.
Lecture 12 Teaching L2 Reading Luo Ling
Some basic considerations a.The age and level of the learners who will be using the materials. b.The extent to which any adopted methodology meets the.
Vocabulary teaching 5 ‘Inferencing’. Laufer, B. (1997). The lexical plight in second language reading: Words you don't know, words you think you know,
Vocabulary teaching 7 ‘Inferencing’. Laufer, B. (1997). The lexical plight in second language reading: Words you don't know, words you think you know,
LISTENING: QUESTIONS OF LEVEL FRANCISCO FUENTES NICOLAS VALENZUELA.
EAP Practice and Second Language Research
Form-focused Instruction in Second Language Vocabulary Learning: A Case for Contrastive Analysis and Translation Present by: Alfasy-Vaxcman Sara & Juma’a.
Deep processing.
11. Assessing Grammar & Vocabulary
An Overview Of Vision 1 Summer 1395.
Inferencing and retention
Brian J English Ph.D. School of Global Studies Tama University
Differences in comprehension strategies for discourse understanding by native Chinese and Korean speakers learning Japanese Katsuo Tamaoka Graduate.
Teaching Listening LLT 307!.
What is the knowledge of words and word meanings called? A.) Comprehension B.) Decoding C.) Vocabulary C.) Vocabulary D.) Inferences L F.
Characteristics of Young Learners
The Skill/Strategy- based Approach
Section VI: Comprehension
The Grammar – Translation Method
Presentation transcript:

Teaching Considerations for Non-Lexicalized L2 Words Seula Han Phuong Tran Shane Lanning Thomas McAlister Ball State University

Introduction  Class project from Spring 2014  Second Language Vocabulary: A cognitive perspective  Ongoing project

Literature Review  Depth of Processing Theory (Craik & Lockhart, 1972) — intensity vs. duration  Noticing Hypothesis (Schmidt, 1990) — exposure  Involvement Load Hypothesis (Laufer & Hulstijn, 2001) — motivation and judgment

Acquisition Strategies Research  Lexical Inferencing  Synonym Generation  Dictionary Usage  Assisted Reading Paribakht and Wesche (1999)

Knowledge Sources  sentence-level grammar  word morphology  punctuation  world knowledge  discourse and text  homonymy  word associations  cognates Paribakht and Wesche (1999)

What are students doing with non-lexicalized L2 words?  They skip them (Blum & Levensten, 1979; Sjöholm, 1998 )  So, our question becomes, what would they do, if they had to decode them?

Methodology  Graduate-level students with various L1 backgrounds (n=4)  1 Arabic, 1 Chinese, 2 Vietnamese  Repeated reading vs. Guided reading  Non-lexicalized vs. Lexicalized words  Pseudo-words were used for both categories  Think-aloud task for both sessions  Assessment

Sample Items: Non-lexicalized  Session 1 (Repeated reading)  The show that we watched was full of gorks. It was about life in America long ago, but you could see some people wearing wristwatches. People used to carry watches in a pocket on a chain. No one used to wear wristwatches. Also, one person was wearing modern day shoes. It was very strange to see! (anachronism)  Session 2 (Guided reading)  We are having traffic problems due to the snopy last night. Cars are moving slowly on slippery roads. Pedestrians need to watch their steps as the sidewalks are both watery and icy. Things become more unbearable in the freezing weather. What a winter day it is! (sleet) Question: What is the weather like?

Non-lexical Strategies Coding  Repetition: Participant repeats any part of the part of the passage; i.e. word, sentence, etc.  Word-form: Participant attempts to compare sound or form to another word (e.g. hormones could be related to harmony because they look similar)  Syntactic: Participant tries to find meaning by looking at the words syntactic function (e.g. makes is a verb in this sentence)

Non-lexical Strategies Coding Cont.  Contextual: Participant tries to figure out the word by figuring out the meaning of the phrasal-, clausal-, or discourse-level context (e.g. it says that he likes to get his exercise, so the word might mean healthy)  Verifying: Participant checks the inferred meaning against the wider context (e.g. Michael avoids going to parties. Michael ‘hates’ going to parties)  Self-inquiry: Participant asks himself or herself a question  Monitoring: Participant evaluates the ease of the word

Teaching Implication I  No different effects between reading tasks on short-term retention  Two tasks: Repeated Reading vs. Guided Reading.  Mean of score for non-lexical words in assessment tests  Assessment 1: 3.75 out of 5  Assessment 2: 3.5 out of 5  No conclusion on which task (i) requires a deeper level of processing (Craik & Lockhart,1972) on short-term retention.

Teaching Implication II  More strategies used in Repeated Reading than in Guided Reading  Repeated Reading: More time  More Strategies  Guided Reading: Guided questions made participants self-perceive to have understood the passages and the unknown words  less strategies needed to infer word meaning  If you are trying to get students to employ strategies, use the repeated reading

Teaching Implication III  Guided reading might help with inference accu- racy  3 participants had higher inference accuracy in gui-ded reading than in repeated reading.  Guided questions helped grasp the overall context, create contextual cues, and converge inference po-ssibilities  more accurate guesses.  If you want to practice inferencing, use the repeated reading

Limitations and Future Study  Sample  Larger sample  Different proficiency levels  Context for non-lexicalized words  Methodology  Assessment test  Think-aloud task

Reference  Craik,F.I.M.,& Lockhart,R.S.(1972). Depth of processing:A framework for memory research. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 11,  Laufer, B., & Hulstijn, J. (2001). Incidental vocabulary acquisition in a second language: The construct of task-induced involvement. Applied Linguistics, 22,  Nassaji, H. (2004). The relationship between depth of vocabulary knowledge and L2 learners' lexical inferencing strategy use and success. The Canadian Modern Language Review/La Revue Canadienne Des Langues Vivantes, 61(1),  Paribakht and Wesche (1999) Reading and “incidental” L2 vocabulary acquisition: An introspective study of lexical inferencing. Studies in Second Language Acquisition, 21,  Schmidt, R. (1990). The Role of Consciousness in Second Language Learning. Applied Linguistics, 11,

Acknowledgements  We thank Brian Greer and Reem Alsufayan who were also part of this project and Dr. Hamada who directed the project.  We also thank the participants for collaborating on the project.

Thank you!