scholarly journals The role of prior lexical knowledge in children’s and adults’ word learning from stories

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emma James ◽  
M. Gareth Gaskell ◽  
Rhiannon Pearce ◽  
Caroline Korell ◽  
Charlotte Dean ◽  
...  

Children and adults benefit from a new word’s phonological neighbours during explicit vocabulary instruction, suggesting that related prior knowledge supports learning across development. This study examined lexical neighbourhood structure during incidental word learning—limiting opportunities for strategically engaging prior knowledge—and tested the hypothesis that prior knowledge would provide additional support during subsequent consolidation.

1995 ◽  
Vol 53 ◽  
pp. 11-23
Author(s):  
Carolien Schouten-van Parreren

Vocabulary acquisition is considered to be one of the most important aspects of foreign language learning, but also of L1 and L2 acquisition. Besides obvious differences, the three language acquisition processes show remarkable similarities, particularly regarding word learning strategies. In this framework the following questions are dealt with: (1) What is the role of word learning strategies in vocabulary instruction? (2) To what extent do pupils differ in word learning strategies? (3) How to best promote that pupils not only acquire, but actually use the acquired strategies? With respect to the first question, the goals of vocabulary instruction and the ways to reach these goals (e.g. by wide reading, using different strategies or attending direct instruction) are made explicit. The second question is illustrated with an example from qualitative research on the differences between strong and weak pupils who were required to guess the meaning of unknown words from illustra-ted texts. As to the third question, the cognitive, affective and motivational conditions for acquiring, valuing and actually using word learning strategies are being discussed.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jelena Mirković ◽  
Marissa Yee ◽  
Maddison Kennedy ◽  
Marianna E. Hayiou-Thomas

Statistical learning plays a key role in language acquisition and development, from word segmentation to grammar learning. In a recent review and meta-analysis, Frost et al. (2019) identified key contributions of the statistical learning literature over the last 20 years, as well as a number of limitations. Here we address three of those limitations across three experiments. First, we address the issue of unrealistic learning environments in previous statistical learning research by training participants on an artificial language comprising multiple regularities (phonological, distributional, semantic), unlike the majority of previous statistical learning studies. Second, to examine learning at several levels of linguistic structure, we use a word learning paradigm at training, which allowed us to assess both word and grammar learning, including generalization of the trained regularities to previously unseen items. Third, to address the issue of underspecification of cognitive mechanisms underpinning statistical learning, we examine the emergence and role of explicit knowledge in generalization performance in both child and adult learners. Additionally, we examine the role of off-line memory consolidation processes. Across three experiments and multiple tasks, we found that both children and adults showed good levels of word learning, but variable levels of generalization of the trained grammatical regularities. Generalization success depended on the age group, type of training, and type of regularity assessed. Across all three experiments, explicit knowledge of the regularities contributed to the performance in some generalization tasks, but it was not key for successful generalization. Off-line consolidation processes consistently influenced long-term maintenance of the newly acquired lexical knowledge, but evidence of their role in grammar learning was mixed. We argue that our findings shed light on the cognitive mechanisms underpinning statistical learning, and provide evidence in support of multicomponential views of statistical learning.


2019 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 461-465 ◽  
Author(s):  
Suzanne M. Adlof

Purpose This prologue introduces the LSHSS Forum: Vocabulary Across the School Grades. The goals of the forum are to provide an overview of the importance of vocabulary to literacy and academic achievement, to review evidence regarding best practices for vocabulary instruction, and to highlight recent research related to word learning with students across different grade levels. Method The prologue provides a foundational overview of vocabulary's role in literacy and introduces the topics of the other ten articles in the forum. These include clinical focus articles, research reviews, and word-learning and vocabulary intervention studies involving students in elementary grades through college. Conclusion Children with language and reading disorders experience specific challenges learning new words, but all students can benefit from high-quality vocabulary instruction. The articles in this issue highlight the characteristics of evidence-based vocabulary interventions for children of different ages, ability levels, and language backgrounds and provide numerous examples of intervention activities that can be modified for use in individual, small-group, or large-group instructional settings.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne E. Adams ◽  
Wendy A. Rogers ◽  
Arthur D. Fisk
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
John Deigh

This essay is a study of the nature of moral judgment. Its main thesis is that moral judgment is a type of judgment defined by its content and not its psychological profile. The essay arrives at this thesis through a critical examination of Hume’s sentimentalism and the role of empathy in its account of moral judgment. The main objection to Hume’s account is its exclusion of people whom one can describe as making moral judgments though they have no motivation to act on them. Consideration of such people, particularly those with a psychopathic personality, argues for a distinction between different types of moral judgment in keeping with the essay’s main thesis. Additional support for the main thesis is then drawn from Piaget’s theory of moral judgment in children.


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