1st Edition

Vocabulary in Language Teaching

By Joe Barcroft Copyright 2016

    This module focuses on the pivotal role of vocabulary in language acquisition, communication, and instruction. It first reviews the nature of vocabulary knowledge, the mental lexicon, and different contexts of vocabulary learning. It then explains how we acquire vocabulary and refine vocabulary knowledge over time. The primary emphasis is on how language instructors can promote evidence-based vocabulary instruction in the classroom. To this effect, the module highlights telling research on the effects of specific tasks (e.g. sentence writing and copying target words) and different ways of presenting target words (e.g. having multiple talkers instead of a single talker producing the target words). It also outlines an effective approach to teaching vocabulary, one that emphasizes multiple presentations of target vocabulary, specificity in the relationship between task type and learning outcomes, and the gradual build-up of language-specific vocabulary knowledge over time. A sample lesson based on this approach is also provided.

    Vocabulary in Language Teaching, Overview, Vocabulary and the Mental Lexicon: A Network of Knowledge, Reflection, Quiz, How Do we Learn Vocabulary?, Implications for Contemporary Language Teaching, Sample Lesson, Quiz, Summary and Conclusion

    Biography

    Joe Barcroft is Professor of Spanish and Second Language Acquisition in the Department of Romance Languages and Literatures at Washington University in St. Louis, USA.