Exploring the relationship between L2 vocabulary size and academic speaking

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Exploring the relationship between L2 vocabulary size and academic speaking. / Wang-Taylor, Yixin; Clenton, Jon.
In: System, Vol. 107, 102822, 07.2022.

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Wang-Taylor Y, Clenton J. Exploring the relationship between L2 vocabulary size and academic speaking. System. 2022 Jul;107:102822. Epub 2022 May 23. doi: 10.1016/j.system.2022.102822

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Exploring the relationship between L2 vocabulary size and academic speaking

AU - Wang-Taylor, Yixin

AU - Clenton, Jon

PY - 2022/7

Y1 - 2022/7

N2 - The current paper explores second language (L2) learners’ academic vocabulary size and its potential relationship to speaking in academic contexts. Our participants were 62 first language (L1) Chinese undergraduates of intermediate English level. We elicited speech samples from monologue tasks in formal class settings. We elicited vocabulary knowledge using two yes / no tests, X_Lex (Meara & Milton, 2003) and the Academic Vocabulary Size Test (AVST; Masrai & Milton, 2018), measuring general and academic vocabulary size, respectively. Our results indicate that AVST scores correlate moderately significantly with several speaking fluency measures and band-based frequency measures of vocabulary use, which outperform the explained variance of X_Lex. The mid-frequency words (K3) forming 56% of the academic words list is perhaps the primary force for the strong predictive strength of the AVST. These findings provide critical pedagogical implications for L2 academic vocabulary learning and teaching in English for Academic Purposes (EAP) classrooms. The AVST emerges as a potential assessment to predict L2 speaking in academic contexts. We discuss future possible research directions with particular reference to vocabulary research in practice.

AB - The current paper explores second language (L2) learners’ academic vocabulary size and its potential relationship to speaking in academic contexts. Our participants were 62 first language (L1) Chinese undergraduates of intermediate English level. We elicited speech samples from monologue tasks in formal class settings. We elicited vocabulary knowledge using two yes / no tests, X_Lex (Meara & Milton, 2003) and the Academic Vocabulary Size Test (AVST; Masrai & Milton, 2018), measuring general and academic vocabulary size, respectively. Our results indicate that AVST scores correlate moderately significantly with several speaking fluency measures and band-based frequency measures of vocabulary use, which outperform the explained variance of X_Lex. The mid-frequency words (K3) forming 56% of the academic words list is perhaps the primary force for the strong predictive strength of the AVST. These findings provide critical pedagogical implications for L2 academic vocabulary learning and teaching in English for Academic Purposes (EAP) classrooms. The AVST emerges as a potential assessment to predict L2 speaking in academic contexts. We discuss future possible research directions with particular reference to vocabulary research in practice.

KW - Speaking fluency

KW - General vocabulary size

KW - Academic vocabulary size

KW - Lexical diversity

KW - Lexical sophistication

U2 - 10.1016/j.system.2022.102822

DO - 10.1016/j.system.2022.102822

M3 - Article

VL - 107

JO - System

JF - System

M1 - 102822

ER -