Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking

Lexical diversity is one of the language tools to measure varied words or vocabulary produced by learners in a text both spoken and written. This research aims to investigate the lexical diversity of children narratives produced by children orally. The research design of this research was a case stu...

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Main Authors: Famala Eka Sanhadi Rahayu, Aries Utomo, Ririn Setyowati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IAIN Salatiga 2020-10-01
Series:Register Journal
Online Access:https://journalregister.iainsalatiga.ac.id/index.php/register/article/view/4531
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spelling doaj-7dfe8d4616d14da8b7f1e84f2cbc691a2020-12-21T05:18:37ZengIAIN SalatigaRegister Journal1979-89032503-040X2020-10-0113237138810.18326/rgt.v13i2.371-3881628Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 SpeakingFamala Eka Sanhadi Rahayu0Aries Utomo1Ririn Setyowati2English Literature, Faculty of Cultural Science, University of Mulawarman, Samarinda 75112, INDONESIAUniversity of MulawarmanUniversity of MulawarmanLexical diversity is one of the language tools to measure varied words or vocabulary produced by learners in a text both spoken and written. This research aims to investigate the lexical diversity of children narratives produced by children orally. The research design of this research was a case study supported by quantitative data. Meanwhile, the subjects of this research are seven children around 6-9 years old. In collecting data, the researchers employed narrative storytelling based on a picture which is drawn by the subjects. In analyzing data, TTR (Type-Token -Ratio) was used to measure the lexical diversity gained from the subject while the theory was used to explain the phenomena. Based on the findings, it is found that (1) older children have higher lexical diversity than the younger ones, (2) younger children produced higher lexical frequency (word tokens) than the older ones (3) individual variations caused an anomaly of the result in which older children were expected to have higher lexical frequency but the result showed the reverse.  Keywords: Lexical Diversity, Children, Oral Narratives, Case Study.https://journalregister.iainsalatiga.ac.id/index.php/register/article/view/4531
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Famala Eka Sanhadi Rahayu
Aries Utomo
Ririn Setyowati
spellingShingle Famala Eka Sanhadi Rahayu
Aries Utomo
Ririn Setyowati
Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking
Register Journal
author_facet Famala Eka Sanhadi Rahayu
Aries Utomo
Ririn Setyowati
author_sort Famala Eka Sanhadi Rahayu
title Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking
title_short Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking
title_full Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking
title_fullStr Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Lexical Diversity of Children Narratives: A Case Study of L1 Speaking
title_sort investigating lexical diversity of children narratives: a case study of l1 speaking
publisher IAIN Salatiga
series Register Journal
issn 1979-8903
2503-040X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Lexical diversity is one of the language tools to measure varied words or vocabulary produced by learners in a text both spoken and written. This research aims to investigate the lexical diversity of children narratives produced by children orally. The research design of this research was a case study supported by quantitative data. Meanwhile, the subjects of this research are seven children around 6-9 years old. In collecting data, the researchers employed narrative storytelling based on a picture which is drawn by the subjects. In analyzing data, TTR (Type-Token -Ratio) was used to measure the lexical diversity gained from the subject while the theory was used to explain the phenomena. Based on the findings, it is found that (1) older children have higher lexical diversity than the younger ones, (2) younger children produced higher lexical frequency (word tokens) than the older ones (3) individual variations caused an anomaly of the result in which older children were expected to have higher lexical frequency but the result showed the reverse.  Keywords: Lexical Diversity, Children, Oral Narratives, Case Study.
url https://journalregister.iainsalatiga.ac.id/index.php/register/article/view/4531
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