Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations

Given the importance of collocations, different attempts have been made to facilitate their learning. One such attempt has been the the application of dynamic assessment models. This study compared the effectiveness of three DA models including Budoff's Learning Potential measurement, Group Dyn...

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Main Authors: Abbas Ali Zarei, Amin Khojasteh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alzahra University 2020-11-01
Series:Journal of Language Horizons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lghor.alzahra.ac.ir/article_5043_64b3ea1fdd35a0a8e9b15b066fa77c22.pdf
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spelling doaj-9bca474b7f5f4a34a3be76a7dcf3d4de2021-02-23T08:42:18ZengAlzahra UniversityJournal of Language Horizons2588-350X2588-56342020-11-014223925910.22051/lghor.2020.29463.12295043Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical CollocationsAbbas Ali Zarei0Amin Khojasteh1Imam Khomeini International University, Qazvin, Iran.MA, Imam Khomeini International University, Qazvin, IranGiven the importance of collocations, different attempts have been made to facilitate their learning. One such attempt has been the the application of dynamic assessment models. This study compared the effectiveness of three DA models including Budoff's Learning Potential measurement, Group Dynamic Assessment, and Intensive Mediated Learning Experience with conventional instruction on the learning of English lexical collocations. One hundred-twenty male students studying English at Allame Helli 5 High School were selected through convenience sampling. A researcher-made collocation comprehension test, containing 100 items, was used as the pre-test. The students were divided into four intact groups. Each group received a different treatment for 16 sessions. A multiple-choice test and a fill-in-the-blanks test, each consisting of 30 items, were used as the post-tests. Analysis of data using one way ANOVA showed that the Intensive-MLE model was more effective than the other models on both comprehension and production of English lexical collocations. The findings may have useful implications for teachers, students, instructional materials designers, and language assessors.https://lghor.alzahra.ac.ir/article_5043_64b3ea1fdd35a0a8e9b15b066fa77c22.pdfbudoff's learning potential measurementdynamic assessment (da)group dynamic assessment (g-da)intensive mediated learning experience (intensive-mle)lexical collocations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abbas Ali Zarei
Amin Khojasteh
spellingShingle Abbas Ali Zarei
Amin Khojasteh
Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations
Journal of Language Horizons
budoff's learning potential measurement
dynamic assessment (da)
group dynamic assessment (g-da)
intensive mediated learning experience (intensive-mle)
lexical collocations
author_facet Abbas Ali Zarei
Amin Khojasteh
author_sort Abbas Ali Zarei
title Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations
title_short Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations
title_full Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations
title_fullStr Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations
title_full_unstemmed Models of Dynamic Assessment Affecting the Learning of English Lexical Collocations
title_sort models of dynamic assessment affecting the learning of english lexical collocations
publisher Alzahra University
series Journal of Language Horizons
issn 2588-350X
2588-5634
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Given the importance of collocations, different attempts have been made to facilitate their learning. One such attempt has been the the application of dynamic assessment models. This study compared the effectiveness of three DA models including Budoff's Learning Potential measurement, Group Dynamic Assessment, and Intensive Mediated Learning Experience with conventional instruction on the learning of English lexical collocations. One hundred-twenty male students studying English at Allame Helli 5 High School were selected through convenience sampling. A researcher-made collocation comprehension test, containing 100 items, was used as the pre-test. The students were divided into four intact groups. Each group received a different treatment for 16 sessions. A multiple-choice test and a fill-in-the-blanks test, each consisting of 30 items, were used as the post-tests. Analysis of data using one way ANOVA showed that the Intensive-MLE model was more effective than the other models on both comprehension and production of English lexical collocations. The findings may have useful implications for teachers, students, instructional materials designers, and language assessors.
topic budoff's learning potential measurement
dynamic assessment (da)
group dynamic assessment (g-da)
intensive mediated learning experience (intensive-mle)
lexical collocations
url https://lghor.alzahra.ac.ir/article_5043_64b3ea1fdd35a0a8e9b15b066fa77c22.pdf
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