Words as species: An alternative approach to estimating productive vocabulary size

dc.contributor.author Meara, Paul
dc.contributor.author Alcoy, Juan Carlos Olmos
dc.date.accessioned 2020-05-22T02:10:48Z
dc.date.available 2020-05-22T02:10:48Z
dc.date.issued 2010-04
dc.description.abstract This paper addresses the issue of how we might be able to assess productive vocabulary size in second language learners. It discusses some previous attempts to develop measures of this sort, and argues that a fresh approach is needed in order to overcome some persistent problems that dog research in this area. The paper argues that there might be some similarities between assessing productive vocabularies—where many of the words known by learners do not actually appear in the material we can extract them from—and counting animals in the natural environment. If this is so, then there might be a case for adapting the capture-recapture methods developed by ecologists to measure animal populations. The paper reports a preliminary attempt to develop this analogy.
dc.identifier.doi 10125/66651
dc.identifier.issn 1539-0578
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10125/66651
dc.publisher University of Hawaii National Foreign Language Resource Center
dc.publisher Center for Language & Technology
dc.subject productive vocabulary
dc.subject capture
dc.subject recapture
dc.subject word counts
dc.subject ecological models
dc.title Words as species: An alternative approach to estimating productive vocabulary size
dc.type Article
dc.type.dcmi Text
local.rfl.topic Lexis
prism.endingpage 236
prism.number 1
prism.startingpage 222
prism.volume 22
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