180 likes | 398 Views
Example 1:. Place the words in each row in a logical order and explain why:stunning, splendid, gorgeousexciting, breathtaking, interestingembarrassing, outrageous, shocking. Example 2: . Which words belong together? Form 3 groups and place the words in each group in a logical order:Thrilling
E N D
1. Task effectiveness and the acquisition of L2 vocabulary Rick de Graaff, Machteld Moonen, Gerard Westhoff
IVLOS, Institute of Education
Utrecht University, The Netherlands
h.c.j.degraaff@ivlos.uu.nl
m.l.i.moonen@ivlos.uu.nl
2. Example 1: Place the words in each row in a logical order and explain why:
stunning, splendid, gorgeous
exciting, breathtaking, interesting
embarrassing, outrageous, shocking
3. Example 2: Which words belong together?Form 3 groups and place the words in each group in a logical order:
Thrilling, risky, prohibitive, dangerous, unsafe, expensive, frightening, pricey, bloodcurdling
4. Example 3: You have participated in a survival trip and broke your leg. Write a complaint letter to the agency using the following words if possible:
Thrilling, risky, prohibitive, dangerous, unsafe, expensive, frightening, pricey, bloodcurdling
5. Task definition “A task is an activity which requires learners to use language, with emphasis on meaning, to attain an objective, and which is intended to lead to or stimulate acquisition”
(Bygate, Skehan & Swain, 2001)
6. Task effectiveness Involvement load? (Laufer & Hulstijn, 2001):
Need
Search
Motivation
7. Task effectiveness: task scope? Willis (1996)
Exposure
Use
Motivation
instruction Westhoff (2004)
Exposure
Focus on meaning
Focus on form
Output & interaction
Strategy use
8. Task effectiveness:Cognitive psychology/ connectionism Distributed representation
Connection strengths
Spreading activation
Learning = Concept formation =
building & strengthening sets of features
9. 3 Components of a task
Assignment
Content
Mental actions
10. The Multi-Feature Hypothesis Retention and ease of activation are enhanced by tasks that elicit mental actions involving:
more features,
more different categories of features,
in great frequency,
in life-like combinations,
simultaneously.
11. Examples of features Semantic
Syntactic
Morphologic
Collocative
Pragmatic
Associative
Affective
12. The study Dutch secondary education
N=49, age 12
Quasi-experimental pre-test post-test design
Spanish vocabulary: school subjects
Two tasks, differing according to MFH
Tests: cloze and translation
13. Research questions Differences in mental actions on content features?
method: think-aloud protocols and retrospective interviews
Differences in retention after task performance?
method: vocabulary tests
14. Preliminary results Q 1 Example think-aloud protocol, control:
Eh, let’s see what’s still left, physics, fi física or something like that, on miércoles, I do physics, física, and I do physics once more on jueves in any case, jueve, what was it like? Jueves then I do it from 14 to 15 I do once more physics and then I’ve got only one left geography, geografía, I put that on jueves the 15th and 16th hour.
15. Preliminary results Q 1 Example think-aloud protocol, experimental:
Ethics or geography, geography that is more suitable for a cab driver mathematics no, a cab driver does have to, he’s got a meter, mathematics should be there, because they also have to return change they have to be able to count, oh no, now I write it down in Dutch, matemáticas or something like that. Geography also belongs to cab driver, or not, I’m not sure anymore geografía.
16. Preliminary results Q 2 ANCOVA: over-all effect for condition
Experimental group ourperforms control group
But: effect only significant at immediate post-test