Chapter 1 the study of collocations
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colloca
iii) Lexical Density
A Lexical Density analysis (LD) was also performed by the researcher. Lexical Density refers to the number of lexical, or 'open class', words divided by 222 the total number of words in each essay and multiplied by 100 (see Long 1991, unpublished paper; Linnarud 1986). For this analysis a number of criteria were defined: abbreviations such as 'etc.', 'e.g.' were not counted at all; proper names were not counted as lexical words (in Group 1 the students were asked to describe themselves and their family, so in each essay there was a considerable number of Greek names that did not really contribute to the semantic richness of the essay and so they were not considered to be lexical words, see also Palmberg 1987:212); names of places in Greece were not counted as lexical words (see above); numbers were not counted as lexical words; adverbs other than those ending in -ly were not counted as lexical words; the verb 'do' was not counted as a lexical word, even when it was used as a main verb; misspelt words that could be easily recognised as English words either in writing or when pronounced according to the Greek or English phonetic system were counted (in this case it was assumed that the student knew the word and was attempting to use it, see also Palmberg 1987:205); words written in Greek were not counted at all. Inter-rater reliability was also obtained for the LD analysis from two other raters on 5% of the data, which randomly sampled (i.e. 15 essays), and was at 98%. Each rater was given the same sample of essays that the TLU raters were given and an instruction sheet (see Appendix J) and were asked to underline the lexical words in each essay. A short training session was given by the researcher on two other essays. After the raters performed the LD analysis on the sample essays, the researcher's and each rater's ratings were 223 compared. There were three instances in which one of the raters had underlined the verb "going" as a lexical word in phrases in which it was an auxiliary, and as such it was a grammatical rather than a lexical word, e.g. essay 37 Group 3 "we are going to do everything". In one case the adverb "hard" was underlined as a lexical word even though it did not end in -ly. Finally, words such as "other" and "everybody" were underlined by the raters even though they were clearly grammatical words, while there were cases in which the raters should have underlined words such as "think", "way", "worst", "better", "use", "thanks" but they did not. Overall, there was agreement between the researcher and the raters in the LD analysis in 1264 out of 1280 lexical words, and the inter-rater reliability was considered sufficient for the LD measurement. Download 0.8 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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