Author First name, Last name, Institution

John Turlik, Zayed University

Document Type

Article

Source of Publication

Learning and Teaching in Higher Education: Gulf Perspectives

Publication Date

2-25-2013

Abstract

Recent years have seen the increasing use of vocabulary frequency lists such as 'the 1,000 most frequent words in English' to assess the difficulty of reading texts, as well as the development of learners' language. This paper reports on a longitudinal study of university essays in English, written every ten weeks under examination conditions, over a period of two years by 42 Arabic-speaking students. The expectation was that students' use of academic vocabulary would begin with those words used most frequently in academic English and, as their vocabulary developed, draw increasingly from less commonly-used words. The evidence from this study of written output suggests that the frequency lists, which are based on academic usage by (near-)native users of English, may not be as applicable as thought for modelling the development of vocabulary use in learners of English as a second or foreign language.

ISSN

2077-5504

Volume

10

Issue

1

First Page

62

Last Page

75

Disciplines

Education

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Indexed in Scopus

no

Open Access

yes

Open Access Type

Gold: This publication is openly available in an open access journal/series

Included in

Education Commons

Share

COinS