11 Ocak 2021 Pazartesi

Vocabulary Sources for Learning

 

What are the sources of vocabulary learning? And how can we make use of them in our lessons? Explain them briefly.

Word List

In this vocabulary source, L1 words in the form of list are put together with their L2 translation regardless of theme. Learners can create their list without considering usefulness, frequency, or lexical field; only based on their needs. Although this way seems to be hard to create cognitive depth in terms of learning, students still like it. We can say that it is a quite economic material as it only requires pen and paper, and learners can test themselves easily by covering one side and uttering other side of the list.  Another reason is that it is a time saving material. With this strategy, some students can learn or memorize up to 30 words in an hour.

Contrary to word cards, it is inevitable to experience serial effect, which is remembering words by previous or next one. And one can easily say that this is not suitable for real life vocabulary use and words are needed to be learned in context, not by an order in a list. These are quite significant concerns.

To integrate this in a class, the teacher asks randomly from the list. Then, the learner reveals the L1 counterpart or demonstrates the picture. In order to create more cognitive depth, the teacher can request from learners to construct a story using 6 of 10 words from the list. Students can test each other with their own vocabulary catalog which they, themselves, created, based on current or previous lesson content.

Reaching the threshold of 2000 to 3000 vocabulary is really tough diet to digest, requiring numerous times of exposure. Utilizing word list is not a cure but and alternative that can smooth the way.

Word Cards

Word cards are another source for vocabulary learning. One side of the cards are written with L1 words while the other ones with target language (L2) counterparts. Cards can be prepared by the teacher or students, or it can be provided from somewhere else. The teacher can make a word box in the class by putting new words in it. He/she can make little quizzes with words taken out of the box. So that previous vocabulary is reviewed. There is no specific rule needs considerations such as choosing the words from similar context. Any word can be written down regardless of context. Important parts are that cards should be around 20 to 50 and words with difficulties should be put the top of the pile. Another thing is, words already learned I should be put aside for focusing on unknown ones

Coursebooks

In modern coursebooks, lexical content of a course is given in the syllabus description. These words are carefully chosen by getting analyzed their usefulness, frequency, learnability and teachability. For this reason, core vocabulary is frequently taught due to their favorability in usage and frequency in content. Cognates, not false friends, and loan words are picked up for increasing learnability. Abstract nouns and words hard to pronounce, such as congratulations, are mostly avoided in the beginning so as not to hinder teachability. Or illustrations are used to make vocabulary more teachable. However, in terms of presentation, words appear in three different aspects: integrated, segregated, and incidental.

Integrated

This can be understood from the name, this activity is integrated with while activity as either pre-activity or post/follow up activity. In both ways, words from while stage are taught or practiced. Frequent words or words hindering comprehension are priority for teaching. Word matching activities with definitions, synonyms, and pictures are tradition of this section. However, at antonyms are mostly avoided for not causing misunderstandings and extra difficulty.

Segregated

Segregated sources are vocabulary activities that is independent from while activity.  They mainly take place in consolidation areas in coursebooks.


Lexical Sets

Segregated sources can be lexical sets, which are using hyponyms. For example, colors, days of week, and common objectives are mostly taught, which is a good source for single slot substitution. However, it has been realized that students have less confusion with unrelated words. Because in substitution activities, students suffer from confusion due to similarities. Still, lexical sets are considered favorable. However, coursebooks aim to emphasize differences, not similarities. So that confusion is aimed to occur less. Within this direction, we can say that chunks are preferred mainly such as hot water, cold beer.

Thematical Vocabulary

Thematical vocabulary is giving learners words from specific scenario, such as ordering in a restaurant regardless of parts of speech. Words are learned by contextualization.  By this aspect, words cannot be substituted generally as in lexical sets. By this, minimal chance of interference is aimed.

Word Formation

Word formation is a segregated vocabulary source taking part in coursebooks. By word formation, the learner can create a new word from different parts of speech (adjective to verb, for example). There are many ways for word formation. However, mostly affixation or word compounding are preferred in coursebooks.

Other Segregated Sources

Other segregated sources can be observed as visual practice such as matching pictures, sequence activities not depending on coursebook topic, testing activities at the end of the unit, or strategy activities such as guessing out of context.


Incidental

It is unintentional and self-learning, which may be caused by instruction or from reading text in the coursebook, an object in the class or even a signboard that students see in the real life. In incidental learning, students learn by themselves without guided discovery.

Vocabulary Books

Vocabulary books covers vocabulary needs for variety of purposes depending on learners needs such as business, technical, or academic English. Apart from single words they also handle phrasal verbs and significant phrases known as chunks in order to familiarize collocation. Words are generally organized thematically and mostly frequent words are targeted. Word formation activities such as affixation and compounding are interwoven in vocabulary books alongside thematical context.

When integrated in classroom environment, the teacher can carry out a diagnostic exercise or quiz in order to emerge already known words and focus on unknown ones. So that he or she can allocate more time for activities accelerating cognitive depth such as brainstorming, telling, and comparing with pairs and writing definitions. The teacher can create a production environment in which learners utilize vocabulary they discovered in the class. This can be creating subcategories for the vocabulary in the lesson, adding new words into their categories free of using dictionary, ranking items in terms of usefulness, telling an experience about the item (new vocabulary), or asking personal questions such as “would you give it (the new vocabulary) as a birthday present?”. So, we can say that vocabulary books is primarily for practicing vocabulary is rather than testing.

 

The teacher

The teacher is valuable source in the class in terms of vocabulary learning. Learners mostly come across new vocabulary or phrases in classroom environment associated with activities and instructions. They can also discover from the teacher’s interpersonal communication.  In both situations, learners discover incidentally in context or environment without teacher’s intention. Self-discovery occurs here.

The teacher can tell a short anecdote and turn this into a learning source. He or she can ask the learners to note the words down during listening part. He or she could replay the record with the help of a recorder if needed. After revising incorrect forms in notes, he or she asks the learners to reconstruct the story. With this activity, known as dictogloss, we can create more cognitive depth in vocabulary.

Some teachers also write new vocabulary on the board in an allocated area with the aim of revising at the end of the class. This can be vocabularies in the lesson, words they utter during conversation, or a brainstorming output before a writing or speaking activity. He or she can ask direct translations, small definitions or can ask learners to remember the context the words were used in. Moreover, in a conversation environment  they pause and focus on specific vocabulary by asking questions to students from time to time, which is called as guided discovery.

 

Other students

Apart from teachers, the students, themselves, are really beneficial source for each other. There are numerous ways that we can prove that this is favorable for themselves. So, we can give a few examples that they learn from each other with social interactions: Brainstorming activities, student presentations in class, peer teaching through information gap, short narrations based on specific vocabulary.

In order to benefit from brainstorming, teacher can create small groups assigned with specific theme. He can ask them to find vocabulary for their theme, such as food, traveling, etc. In other words, the teacher asks students to create a lexical field. If there are many options, the teacher can narrow groups in terms of searching criteria such as finding vocabulary whose initials are specific letters or specific parts of speech such as noun or adjective. The teacher can ask groups to create lexical fields with different lexical sets. Afterwards, the teacher can combine oh regroup groups for exchanging information.

In student presentations, the other learners learn incidentally as in teachers speaking. The teacher asks learners to take notes during presentation or the teacher gives vocabulary about the field an ask students to write a summary.

Another way of learning vocabulary from each other is peer to peer interaction. a word known by one student is also learned by others. If the other peer does not know, then the narrator peer teaches him. This is called as information gap activity.

In narration activities, the teacher gives vocabulary about a theme, in other words lexical field, and asks the learners to build a short story and narrate before the class.

 

Graded readers

Graded books are one of the most favorable resources for vocabulary building. Classified as extensive reading, the learner experiences comprehensible input, which is a reading content consisting 90 to 95 percent of already known words. With graded readers, students come across new words they discovered in context multiple times. This is essential because the learner requires to be exposed to new vocabulary at least seven times to embrace it.  The more the student enjoys the reading the less it seems to be challenging work and consuming reading resources turns out to be a pleasure for learners.  

Another clue for graded readers is narrow reading, which is reading around the same topic in order to come across and strengthen the vocabulary on specific area. Narrow reading should not be narrowed into reading because listening and watching are also utilized for the same purpose. For instance, a learner watching a TV series plotting in an island will naturally be better at vocabulary on island life or a reader reading detective and mystery stories will be better at police terminology.

Dictionaries

When we look back, we can see that students were encouraged to guess meanings out of context rather than checking on dictionaries. With their reassessed value, dictionaries have two different types: bilingual and monolingual. Learners tend to use bilingual dictionary at first because it takes minimum time to reach the meaning, in reading and listening the context is covered with shorter interruptions, and it is a real source for productive skills such as writing and speaking. On the other hand, monolingual dictionaries help us build the meaning in L2.

Apart from types, we can categorize dictionaries for two different purposes: native speaker dictionaries and learner dictionaries. In learner dictionaries, we see restricted definitions so as not to confuse the learner. And contrary to native speaker dictionaries, they demonstrate usage, grammar such as weather the noun is countable or uncountable, or whether they were is gerund or infinitive. Some dictionaries also warn about typical errors that learners make.

We can always consider dictionaries as a source for vocabulary building because they are organized alphabetically or thematically. By the way, picture dictionaries are thematically organized depicting the same lexical field. However, they do not have many options because not all words can be illustrated.

We can clearly say that thematic dictionaries are better for productive skills. Learners get words they require and integrate them their speaking or writing.

Language of dictionaries are based on core vocabulary, which means most frequent used 2000 words in a language. Because these words are mostly known, an independent user (B1/B2 CEFR) can use it freely. Today, dictionaries have specific purposes: business, idioms, collocation, phrasal verbs, and pronunciation. Learners can prefer depending on their needs.

While using a dictionary, learners should be careful about polysemes (the fact of having more than one meaning) such as “digest” in “digesting the food” and “digesting the words”. Another thing is homonyms (a word that is spelled the same as another word but that does not have the same meaning). We can say that not all dictionaries tend to give example for this category. For example, marine /məˈriːn/ meaning “found in or produced by sea” and marine meaning “member of a body of soldiers trained to fight on land or sea.” are completely different words but spelled and pronounced the same.

In order to create some cognitive depth, before having students check on dictionaries, teachers can dictate words sharing same sound but different letters or words having common letters but different sounds. Today some dictionaries also offer activities in order to enhance cognitive depth as in vocabulary books.


 

Corpus data

“A corpus is a large collection of written or spoken texts that is used for language research.”[1] We can call them as work banks. In modern course books and dictionaries, sentences given as example, and some rules are placed or determined by analyzing millions of corpus data.

Carpus data are search via concordancing dictionaries, which are typical search engines for vocabulary usage. Corpus data are convenient source for verifing vocabulary usage because words are displayed with collocation. It can be ultimately said that corpus data is favorable source for vocabulary practicing because it takes it from real extensive resources.

Teachers also can benefit from corpus data for their classes. Keywords are frequent and important words in the piece of text. By searching corpus data, the instructor can search for keywords for the class subject and utilize them as a pre-teach material in the class. Moreover, they can bring example sentences into the class. Multiple occurrence or examples of a word will help learners to understand and internalize to word easier.  



[1] https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/corpus