Second Language Learning and Language Teaching
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cook vivian second language learning and language teaching
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- Box 3.1 Test how many words you know Complete these definitions, then look at the answers at the end of the chapter on page 65. 1
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Position Nouns Verbs Adjectives 1 time say new 2 people know good 3 way get old 4 year go different 5 government see local 6 day make small 7 man think great 8 world take social 9 work come important 10 life use national 11 part give British 12 number want possible 13 children find large 14 system mean young 15 case look able 16 thing begin political 17 end help public 18 group become high 19 woman tell available 20 party seem full Table 3.1 The 20 most frequent nouns, verbs and adjectives in English Box 3.1 Test how many words you know Complete these definitions, then look at the answers at the end of the chapter on page 65. 1 a round object often used as a toy is a b__________ 2 something you carry and put things in is a b_________ 3 a pipe or channel through which things flow is a c__________ 4 to give way to someone is to y__________ 5 a person who works without being paid is a v__________ 6 a preparation for preventing infectious disease is a v__________ 7 a heavy glass with a handle is known as a t__________ 8 a type of brain chemical is s__________ 9 a sailor’s word for a clumsy fellow is a l__________ 10 the effects of wind, rain, and so on, on objects is w__________ 11 a heavy wheel used to store power is a f__________ 12 something engraved on stone is l__________ and module 1 of New Cutting Edge is far from frequent, in fact number 19,467 on the BNC list, but it is certainly available to speakers and, quite rightly, needs to be taught in the very early stages, particularly when the naming systems differ between languages and it is unclear which of a person’s names might count as their surname in English; the use of ‘last name’ in Unit 1 of Touchstone (McCarthy, 2005) seems particularly dubious given that family names come first in Chinese. Carter (1988) has proposed that a language has a ‘core’ vocabulary found in all its uses, plus ‘subject’ cores specific to specialist subject matters, and a non-core vocabulary. Influential as frequency has been in teaching, it has not played a major role in SLA research. It belongs more to the descriptive Lang 3 sense of ‘language’ as a col- lection of sentences. It is true that you are more likely to remember a word you meet every day than one you only meet once. But there are many other factors that make students learn words. A swear word ‘****’ said accidentally when the teacher drops the tape recorder is likely to be remembered by the students for ever, even if it is never repeated. Common words like ‘because’ and ‘necessary’ are still spelt wrongly after students have been meeting them for many years. Frequency of vocabulary has been applied in teaching mainly to the choice of words to be taught. In a sense, the most useful words for the student are obviously going to be those that are common. But it is unnecessary to worry about fre- quency too much. If the students are getting reasonably natural English from their coursebooks and their teachers, the common words will be supplied auto- matically. The most frequent words do not differ greatly from one type of English to another; the commonest five words in Jane Austen’s novels are ‘the’, ‘to’, ‘and’, ‘of’, ‘a’; in 7-year-old native children’s writing ‘and’, ‘the’, ‘a’, ‘I’, ‘to’; in the BNC ‘the’, ‘of’, ‘and’, ‘a’, ‘in’; and in Japanese students of English ‘I’, ‘to’, ‘the’, ‘you’, ‘and’. Any natural English the students hear will have the proper frequencies of words; it is only the edited texts and conversations of the classroom that do not have these properties, for better or worse. Knowledge of words 49 Download 1.11 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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