Woord Voor Woord. De Invloed Van Semantische En Vormelijke Clustering Op Het Leren Van De Betekenis Van Spaanse Werkwoorden
Maria Mos | Graduate School for Humanities, Universiteit van Amsterdam
According to the distinctiveness hypothesis, words are best learned together if they are distinct; otherwise, cross-association may occur, i.e., words are confused. This means that clustering words thematically in instructed second-language acquisition is potentially disadvantageous for the speed with which the meaning is acquired. In this article, recent research is reviewed that supports the distinctiveness hypothesis. An experiment is presented in which first-year university students of Spanish learned 24 verbs, eight of which were semantically related (e.g., instar-'insist' on and preconizar-'argue'), eight were related in form (e.g., disponerse-'prepare oneself' and superponerse-'overlap'), and eight were unrelated (e.g., aplacar-'soothe' and acoger-'welcome'). The results support both hypotheses for the semantically related words, but not for the orthographically related words.
Article language: Dutch
Cited by (1)
Cited by one other publication
Verspoor, Marjolijn & Marjolein Cremer
2008.
Research on foreign-language teaching and learning in the Netherlands (2002–2006).
Language Teaching 41:2
► pp. 183 ff.
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