Abstract

AbstractThe aim of this paper is to provide an exploratory overview of second-language classroom activities that can be used in order to stimulate students’ collocational and colligational fluency. For at least two decades, it has been acknowledged in second language vocabulary acquisition research that lexical proficiency extends beyond knowledge of single words, and thus, learners should be given exposure to longer stretches of language, i.e., what is sometimes referred to as “chunks”. After briefly discussing the motivation behind this theoretical stance, this paper will present and discuss a range of strategies that learners can successfully employ to notice, store and actively produce the many multi-word expressions that make up the bulk of language in use. The relevance of the current study lies primarily in its pedagogical implications. The selection of strategies has been based on a review of the current literature into the teaching of phraseology as well as the author’s own reflective practice. One of the main findings to emerge from this paper is that though many strategies have been suggested, only a small minority has been subjected to empirical or experimental verification, and that practitioners like curriculum developers, materials writers and teachers should be advised to judge the available array of activities critically.

Highlights

  • This article sets out to explore the wide range of vocabulary teaching strategies that can be successfully deployed when trying to improve second-language (L2) learners’ collocational and colligational fluency

  • Note that tasks like categorising or matching and their corresponding teaching/ learning strategies can be classified in many different ways

  • CONCLUDING REMARKS This study brought together a relatively wide range of activities that can be used in the second-language classroom

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Summary

Introduction

This article sets out to explore the wide range of vocabulary teaching strategies that can be successfully deployed when trying to improve second-language (L2) learners’ collocational and colligational fluency. The term “collocation” refers to one of the features of “vocabulary depth”, i.e., the quality—rather than the mere quantity—of a person’s lexical knowledge (Daller et al, 2007). It is generally defined as “the association of lexical items that regularly co-occur” Examples include adjectives and nouns (e.g. scenic drive), nouns and nouns (e.g. test drive), verbs. Antoon De Rycker plus nouns (e.g. take a drive), nouns plus verbs (e.g. the drive lasted two hours) and all sorts of more or less fixed templates or phrases (e.g. within an hour’s drive, be a short drive away). For a recent discussion of the terminological issues in collocation research, see Antle (2012)

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