البحث المتقدم
     

Vocabulary and reading comprehension revisited : evidence for high-, mid-, and low-frequency vocabulary knowledge

[Abstract] 
النوع مقال
ردمد 21582440
مصدر المعلومات ERIC
المؤلف Masrai, Ahmed. King Abdul Aziz Military Academy, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.
الوتيرة 13 p.
ملاحظة عامة Peer reviewed
المصدر SAGE Open. Vol. 9, no. 2, April 2019
الناشر Thousand Oaks: SAGE Publications، 2019
عنوان الناشر 2455 Teller Road. Thousand Oaks, CA 91320. United States. SAGE Publications. T: 0018008187243 T: 0018054999774. F: 0018005832665. journals@sagepub.com. http://sagepub.com.
ERIC رقم الوثيقة في EJ1221339
المصدر الالكتروني Full text (PDF)  PDF
الواصفات Vocabulary development  -  Reading  -  English  -  Second language instruction  -  Orthographic symbols  -  Language tests  -  Language proficiency  -  University students  -  Reading tests  -  Saudi Arabia
لغة الوثيقة الانكليزية
البلد الولايات المتحدة
The association between vocabulary knowledge and reading comprehension has been extensively researched. However, modeling the contribution of vocabulary knowledge within different frequency ranges to second language (L2) learners' reading comprehension is an underexplored area. Thus, the present study examines the degree to which high-, mid-, and low-frequency-based levels of orthographic vocabulary knowledge are able to predict L2 reading comprehension. A vocabulary size test and the reading section of International English Language Testing System (IELTS) were administered to 256 tertiary-level Arab learners of English. The participants' language proficiency ranged from B2 to C1 of Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR) levels. Results showed that high- and mid-frequency word ranges contributed uniquely to the L2 reading comprehension for the entire cohort. When the participants were categorized to relatively low- and relatively high-proficiency subgroups, only high-frequency range explained variance in L2 reading comprehension for the low-proficiency subgroup. Among the high-proficiency subgroup, high-, mid-, and low-frequency-based ranges offered unique contribution to L2 reading comprehension, but mid-frequency range explained the largest variance. The findings provide evidence aimed at informing approaches to the development of overall vocabulary size and the mid-frequency words, and not just a focus on the most frequent vocabulary, for the purpose of supporting L2 reading comprehension. (As Provided)

PermaLink  الرابط الثابت:

 برامج إدارة المراجع:

Refworks التصدير ل RefWorks

EndNote التصدير ل EndNote


 شارك من خلال وسائل التواصل الاجتماعية:




Cite   للمزيد من الدقة يرجى التأكد من أسلوب صياغة المرجع وإجراء التعديلات اللازمة قبل استخدام أسلوب (APA) :
Masrai, Ahmed. (2019). Vocabulary and reading comprehension revisited : evidence for high-, mid-, and low-frequency vocabulary knowledge. SAGE Open. Vol. 9, no. 2, April 2019. تم استرجاعه من search.shamaa.org .