Semantic Categories and Context in L2 Vocabulary Learning Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • This article extends recent findings that presenting semantically related vocabulary simultaneously inhibits learning. It does so by adding story contexts. Participants learned 32 new labels for known concepts from four different semantic categories in stories that were either semantically related (one category per story) or semantically unrelated (four categories per story). They then completed a semantic-categorization task, followed by a stimulus-match verification task in an eye-tracker. Results suggest that there may be a slight learning advantage in the semantically unrelated condition. However, our findings are better interpreted in terms of how learning occurred and how vocabulary was processed afterward. Additionally, our results suggest that contextual support from the stories may have surmounted much of the disadvantage attributed to semantic relatedness. 2011 Language Learning Research Club, University of Michigan.

published proceedings

  • Language Learning

author list (cited authors)

  • Bolger, P., & Zapata, G.

citation count

  • 18

complete list of authors

  • Bolger, Patrick||Zapata, Gabriela

publication date

  • June 2011