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Conceptual motivation as a tool for raising language awareness in the English as a foreign language classroom – Does it enhance learning outcomes? Insights from an empirical study

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Published/Copyright: December 6, 2016

Abstract

This paper presents the results of an empirical study on phrasal verbs with to come, to give, to go, to get, and to take and up, down, out as complements. Presuming that in many instances the overall meaning of PVs cannot be adequately inferred from the senses of their constituent parts (e.g., to make up for ⇒ to compensate), it is hypothesized that raising awareness for the underlying conceptual motivation of the verbs and the particles helps learners study PVs more efficiently.

A quasi-experimental field study including a pre-/post-test design with both an experimental group (EG) and a control group (CG) was conducted in an authentic secondary school context in Germany. The participants were higher track ninth graders with L1 German. The corpus of PVs, the time of instruction (3 × 45 minutes) and the text material the students worked with were identical over both groups. Yet, only in the EG the students worked on the conceptual motivations of PVs. Different theoretical strands were used as a resource to develop CL-inspired teaching material (Mahpeykar and Tyler 2014; Rudzka-Ostyn 2003; Tyler and Evans 2003). The studies investigated a) the effect of CL-methods on retention and b) the transfer of CL insights to novel PVs.

With regard to retention, the study could not statistically prove an advantage for the EG. However, statistical evidence was found that the EG outperformed the CG significantly on transfer ( p < .05).

Published Online: 2016-12-6
Published in Print: 2016-11-1

© 2016 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Titelei
  2. Contents
  3. Section A
  4. Introduction: Cognitive approaches to L2 learning and teaching
  5. German modals in second language acquisition: A constructionist approach
  6. „Im Deutschen kan das nicht“ – Text type didactics for the teaching of German modal verb constructions
  7. Path encoding in German as a foreign language: Difficulties encountered by L1 Spanish learners
  8. One step closer to the target: Using Construction Grammar to teach the expression of motion events to Japanese learners of English
  9. Section B
  10. Metaphors and grammar teaching
  11. The acquisition of the German case system by foreign language learners through computer animations based on cognitive linguistics
  12. Animation of grammar – Interplay of cognitive linguistics and multimedia learning: The example of German modal auxiliaries
  13. Teaching the form-function mapping of German ‘prefield’ elements using Concept-Based Instruction
  14. Frame-based instruction: Teaching polysemous nouns in the L2
  15. Conceptual motivation as a tool for raising language awareness in the English as a foreign language classroom – Does it enhance learning outcomes? Insights from an empirical study
  16. A lexical-semantic analysis of the English prepositions at, on and in and their conceptual mapping onto Arabic
  17. Section C
  18. The role of scaffolding in children’s questions: Implications for (preschool) language assessment from a usage-based perspective
  19. Destabilisation, IL variation and restructuring in foreign language learning
  20. Gesture as a window onto conceptualization in multiple tasks: Implications for second language teaching
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