Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.21.1.7

Keywords:

collocational knowledge, ESP, vocabulary uptake, involvement load, written output

Abstract

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.

Author Biography

Svetlana Danilina, Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine

Svetlana Danilina, PhD, is an Associate Professor of the Department of Foreign Languages for Faculties of Philosophy and History at Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv, Ukraine. She teaches General English and ESP courses to undergraduate students of history and philosophy. Her research interests focus on various aspects of second language acquisition, including the use of communicative approach and CLIL methodology in teaching ESP in university settings, intentional and incidental vocabulary uptake, and literary translation and the applicability of translation in the contemporary EFL classroom.

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Published

2021-05-24

How to Cite

Danilina, S. (2021). Collocational Knowledge Uptake by University Students under Online Learning. English Studies at NBU, 7(1), 97–117. https://doi.org/10.33919/esnbu.21.1.7

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