Abstract

Adults attending short, language for specific purpose courses may have expertise not utilized in general foreign language courses. The present study investigates two factors that may influence the acquisition of medical Spanish vocabulary in such persons: native English vocabulary size and topic knowledge. Forty-four health care workers attended 12 hr of medical Spanish instruction. Prior to instruction, the Nelson–Denny Vocabulary Test, a Medical Spanish vocabulary test, and an English Medical Terminology Test (an indicator of topic knowledge) were administered. The Medical Spanish Vocabulary Test was readministered at posttest. Individually, both English medical terminology knowledge and English vocabulary size were significant predictors of medical Spanish vocabulary acquisition, but English medical terminology knowledge explained most of the variance in medical Spanish vocabulary acquisition. The results are discussed in terms of the impact of expert memory organization on the ability to learn new labels in a second language. A curricular shift toward content-centered vocabulary in language for specific purpose courses may be advantageous for some groups of foreign language learners.

Highlights

  • The 21st century has brought dramatic growth in demand for foreign language courses for specific professional groups

  • The purpose of the present study was to examine the influence of two factors believed to influence foreign language acquisition—native language vocabulary base and subject background knowledge

  • We were interested in the influence of native English vocabulary size and medical background knowledge on medical Spanish vocabulary acquisition

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Summary

Introduction

The 21st century has brought dramatic growth in demand for foreign language courses for specific professional groups. Doctors and other medical professionals in the United States have found that general Spanish knowledge does not always equip them with the vocabulary necessary for communicating with their patients (Burbano-O’Leary, Federico, & Hampers, 2003) Such a need has motivated a growing number of medical schools and continuing education programs to offer Medical Spanish courses (Binder et al, 1988; Frasier, Davalos, Nusbaum, & Skinner, 2005; Prince & Nelson, 1995). As the learner increases his foreign language vocabulary knowledge, both the learner’s native and second language vocabulary base may facilitate the learning of new words. Second language researchers have investigated a number of factors contributing to native language acquisition: word memory, phonological memory, background knowledge, and the recognition of grammar. These have been found to hold true for second language acquisition as well (De Bot et al, 2005; Nation, 2001)

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