Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors

L2 lexical studies have established that learners need to acquire knowledge of the first 3,000 most frequent words in order to enjoy 95% coverage of the vocabulary used in spontaneous speech (Nation 2006). However, there has been little data available that reveal how many of these most frequent wor...

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Main Author: Robert J. Blake
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2020-11-01
Series:L2 Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/69g0f89j
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spelling doaj-921ef88f112b40cab8356d7d4de83ca52020-12-02T23:26:04ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaL2 Journal1945-02221945-02222020-11-011234360https://doi.org/10.5070/L20048986Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish MajorsRobert J. Blake0University of California - DavisL2 lexical studies have established that learners need to acquire knowledge of the first 3,000 most frequent words in order to enjoy 95% coverage of the vocabulary used in spontaneous speech (Nation 2006). However, there has been little data available that reveal how many of these most frequent words can be recognized by university language majors, with Robles-García´s (2020a, 2020b) recent study being a welcome exception. The present inquiry into L2 vocabulary gains employed the same word-recognition test developed by Robles-García (2020a) in order to characterize the vocabulary size enjoyed by upper-division Spanish majors, both non-native and bilingual native (i.e., heritage) speakers, enrolled in a California public university. The results show that non-native Spanish majors in their third and fourth year of the major are still struggling to learn the first 3,000 most frequent Spanish words. In contrast, the heritage students demonstrated strong word recognition of almost all of the words in this basic inventory. The curricular implications of these results are discussed with respect to both non-native and bilingual native Spanish majors and an argument is made for continued explicit vocabulary instruction throughout the upper-division program.https://escholarship.org/uc/item/69g0f89jl2 vocabulary developmentword recognitionfirst 3000 most frequent words3k-lexnon-native and heritage learnersadvanced vocabulary instruction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert J. Blake
spellingShingle Robert J. Blake
Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors
L2 Journal
l2 vocabulary development
word recognition
first 3
000 most frequent words
3k-lex
non-native and heritage learners
advanced vocabulary instruction
author_facet Robert J. Blake
author_sort Robert J. Blake
title Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors
title_short Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors
title_full Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors
title_fullStr Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors
title_full_unstemmed Vocabulary and the Upper-division Language Curriculum: The Case of Non-native and Heritage Spanish Majors
title_sort vocabulary and the upper-division language curriculum: the case of non-native and heritage spanish majors
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series L2 Journal
issn 1945-0222
1945-0222
publishDate 2020-11-01
description L2 lexical studies have established that learners need to acquire knowledge of the first 3,000 most frequent words in order to enjoy 95% coverage of the vocabulary used in spontaneous speech (Nation 2006). However, there has been little data available that reveal how many of these most frequent words can be recognized by university language majors, with Robles-García´s (2020a, 2020b) recent study being a welcome exception. The present inquiry into L2 vocabulary gains employed the same word-recognition test developed by Robles-García (2020a) in order to characterize the vocabulary size enjoyed by upper-division Spanish majors, both non-native and bilingual native (i.e., heritage) speakers, enrolled in a California public university. The results show that non-native Spanish majors in their third and fourth year of the major are still struggling to learn the first 3,000 most frequent Spanish words. In contrast, the heritage students demonstrated strong word recognition of almost all of the words in this basic inventory. The curricular implications of these results are discussed with respect to both non-native and bilingual native Spanish majors and an argument is made for continued explicit vocabulary instruction throughout the upper-division program.
topic l2 vocabulary development
word recognition
first 3
000 most frequent words
3k-lex
non-native and heritage learners
advanced vocabulary instruction
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/69g0f89j
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