Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning

The article discusses an experiment that looked into the acquisition of collocational knowledge in three university groups studying online, each subjected to different learning conditions: incidental acquisition, intentional acquisition, and intentional acquisition with an extra productive output (e...

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Main Author: Svetlana Danilina
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: New Bulgarian University 2021-06-01
Series:English Studies at NBU
Subjects:
esp
Online Access:https://esnbu.org/data/files/2021/esnbu.21.1.7.pdf
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spelling doaj-806e74a12e53400184abda95050db5fa2021-06-02T16:29:42ZengNew Bulgarian UniversityEnglish Studies at NBU2367-57052367-87042021-06-017197117https://doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.21.1.7Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online LearningSvetlana Danilina0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2005-9363Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, UkraineThe article discusses an experiment that looked into the acquisition of collocational knowledge in three university groups studying online, each subjected to different learning conditions: incidental acquisition, intentional acquisition, and intentional acquisition with an extra productive output (essay), the latter having been assessed for the amount and accuracy of target lexis usage in their texts. The aim of the study was to see how well upper-intermediate university students could identify collocations in an input text, and how the text-based output affected the collocational uptake outcomes. The study showed that the productive output group outperformed the other intentional learning group, while incidental acquisition group failed to complete a productive knowledge posttest. Although the study revealed only slightly higher gains in the output group, their results appeared more consistent than those demonstrated by the other intentional uptake group, whose retention rate decreased by the time of delayed posttest.https://esnbu.org/data/files/2021/esnbu.21.1.7.pdfcollocational knowledgeespvocabulary uptakeinvolvement loadwritten output
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Svetlana Danilina
spellingShingle Svetlana Danilina
Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning
English Studies at NBU
collocational knowledge
esp
vocabulary uptake
involvement load
written output
author_facet Svetlana Danilina
author_sort Svetlana Danilina
title Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning
title_short Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning
title_full Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning
title_fullStr Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning
title_full_unstemmed Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning
title_sort collocational knowledge uptake by university students under online learning
publisher New Bulgarian University
series English Studies at NBU
issn 2367-5705
2367-8704
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The article discusses an experiment that looked into the acquisition of collocational knowledge in three university groups studying online, each subjected to different learning conditions: incidental acquisition, intentional acquisition, and intentional acquisition with an extra productive output (essay), the latter having been assessed for the amount and accuracy of target lexis usage in their texts. The aim of the study was to see how well upper-intermediate university students could identify collocations in an input text, and how the text-based output affected the collocational uptake outcomes. The study showed that the productive output group outperformed the other intentional learning group, while incidental acquisition group failed to complete a productive knowledge posttest. Although the study revealed only slightly higher gains in the output group, their results appeared more consistent than those demonstrated by the other intentional uptake group, whose retention rate decreased by the time of delayed posttest.
topic collocational knowledge
esp
vocabulary uptake
involvement load
written output
url https://esnbu.org/data/files/2021/esnbu.21.1.7.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT svetlanadanilina collocationalknowledgeuptakebyuniversitystudentsunderonlinelearning
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