在高风险,低曝光的语境中使用单词列表:主题驱动或频率通知

IF 4.7 1区 文学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
E. Marsden, Amber Dudley, R. Hawkes
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在英国,为16岁的法语、德语和西班牙语初学者到中低年级学生创建和管理高风险评估的奖励组织提供可选的主题驱动单词列表,作为教师和教材编写者的指南。鉴于这些名单是由颁奖机构制定的,它们对教学产生了强大的反作用。然而,我们不知道这些列表中有多少实际用于考试。因此,我们分析了这些列表在制定中等教育普通证书听力和阅读考试时的使用程度,该考试共有116647个单词。一项关键发现表明,迄今为止,大约一半的颁奖组织名单从未在任何考试中使用过。考虑到最近课程政策的变化,我们还调查了单词列表类型——频率信息列表与颁奖组织的主题驱动列表——如何影响考试的词汇覆盖率。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,使用主题驱动列表可能是对课堂时间的次优利用,因为它们不能为学习者提供足够的单词来轻松理解任何给定的文本。然而,基于频率的单词表似乎能更好地为学习者的考试做好准备。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Use of word lists in a high‐stakes, low‐exposure context: Topic‐driven or frequency‐informed
The awarding organizations that create and administer high‐stakes assessments for beginner‐to‐low‐intermediate 16‐year‐old learners of French, German, and Spanish in England provide optional topic‐driven word lists as guides for teachers and textbook writers. Given that these lists are developed by the awarding organizations, they exert a powerful washback effect on teaching and learning. However, we do not know how much of these lists have actually been used in exams. We therefore analyzed the extent to which these lists have been used when developing the General Certificate of Secondary Education listening and reading exams, a corpus totaling 116,647 words. One key finding showed that approximately half of the awarding organizations’ lists had never been used in any of the exams to date. Given recent changes to curriculum policy, we also investigated how word list type—frequency‐informed versus the awarding organizations’ topic‐driven lists—affected lexical coverage of the exams. Overall, our findings suggested that using the topic‐driven lists was likely to be a suboptimal use of lesson time, as they did not provide learners with enough words to understand any given text with ease. Frequency‐informed word lists, however, seemed to better prepare learners for the exams.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
4.10%
发文量
59
期刊介绍: A refereed publication, The Modern Language Journal is dedicated to promoting scholarly exchange among teachers and researchers of all modern foreign languages and English as a second language. This journal publishes documented essays, quantitative and qualitative research studies, response articles, and editorials that challenge paradigms of language learning and teaching. The Modern Language Journal offers a professional calendar of events and news, a listing of relevant articles in other journals, an annual survey of doctoral degrees in all areas concerning foreign and second languages, and reviews of scholarly books, textbooks, videotapes, and software.
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