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Use of verb collocations by primary school children in science assessment tasks: a study of English native and non-native speaking children

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Use of verb collocations by primary school children in science assessment tasks: a study of English native and non-native speaking children. / Afitska, Oksana; Buendia-Castro, Miriam.
In: The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL, Vol. 13, No. 2, 02.12.2024, p. 3-29.

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Afitska, O & Buendia-Castro, M 2024, 'Use of verb collocations by primary school children in science assessment tasks: a study of English native and non-native speaking children', The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL, vol. 13, no. 2, pp. 3-29.

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Afitska, Oksana ; Buendia-Castro, Miriam. / Use of verb collocations by primary school children in science assessment tasks : a study of English native and non-native speaking children. In: The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL. 2024 ; Vol. 13, No. 2. pp. 3-29.

Bibtex

@article{ddbf002c085d437981e44118135a8f32,
title = "Use of verb collocations by primary school children in science assessment tasks: a study of English native and non-native speaking children",
abstract = "This paper, drawing on the findings from empirical research project conducted collaboratively by the University of Sheffield, Lancaster University and the corresponding Local Councils in five state primary schools in England, examines productive use of verb collocations in assessment tasks by English language learners (ELLs) and English native-speaking (ENS) children. Learner test data from Years 4 and 5 at key Stage 2 (8-10 year olds) in each school was analysed in order to answer the following research questions: 1) in assessment conditions, targeting elicitation of subject specific knowledge through active production of written language (Author 1 & Author 3, 2019), what verb collocations do ELLs and ENSs rely most on, and 2) to what extent does learners{\textquoteright} use of verb collocations differ from that found in subject-specific primary dictionaries, science study books, and general corpora? The results revealed that both groups of learners produced collocations with general rather than specialised verbs most often, despite their frequent use in primary educational resources. Additionally, ELLs had difficulties with correct choice of prepositions for specific verbs and with syntactic and discourse aspects of the language, whereas ENSs did not experience these problems. ",
keywords = "verb collocations, English language learners, primary education, science, content and language integrated learning",
author = "Oksana Afitska and Miriam Buendia-Castro",
year = "2024",
month = dec,
day = "2",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
pages = "3--29",
journal = " The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL",
issn = "2192-1032",
publisher = "LinguaBooks",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Use of verb collocations by primary school children in science assessment tasks

T2 - a study of English native and non-native speaking children

AU - Afitska, Oksana

AU - Buendia-Castro, Miriam

PY - 2024/12/2

Y1 - 2024/12/2

N2 - This paper, drawing on the findings from empirical research project conducted collaboratively by the University of Sheffield, Lancaster University and the corresponding Local Councils in five state primary schools in England, examines productive use of verb collocations in assessment tasks by English language learners (ELLs) and English native-speaking (ENS) children. Learner test data from Years 4 and 5 at key Stage 2 (8-10 year olds) in each school was analysed in order to answer the following research questions: 1) in assessment conditions, targeting elicitation of subject specific knowledge through active production of written language (Author 1 & Author 3, 2019), what verb collocations do ELLs and ENSs rely most on, and 2) to what extent does learners’ use of verb collocations differ from that found in subject-specific primary dictionaries, science study books, and general corpora? The results revealed that both groups of learners produced collocations with general rather than specialised verbs most often, despite their frequent use in primary educational resources. Additionally, ELLs had difficulties with correct choice of prepositions for specific verbs and with syntactic and discourse aspects of the language, whereas ENSs did not experience these problems.

AB - This paper, drawing on the findings from empirical research project conducted collaboratively by the University of Sheffield, Lancaster University and the corresponding Local Councils in five state primary schools in England, examines productive use of verb collocations in assessment tasks by English language learners (ELLs) and English native-speaking (ENS) children. Learner test data from Years 4 and 5 at key Stage 2 (8-10 year olds) in each school was analysed in order to answer the following research questions: 1) in assessment conditions, targeting elicitation of subject specific knowledge through active production of written language (Author 1 & Author 3, 2019), what verb collocations do ELLs and ENSs rely most on, and 2) to what extent does learners’ use of verb collocations differ from that found in subject-specific primary dictionaries, science study books, and general corpora? The results revealed that both groups of learners produced collocations with general rather than specialised verbs most often, despite their frequent use in primary educational resources. Additionally, ELLs had difficulties with correct choice of prepositions for specific verbs and with syntactic and discourse aspects of the language, whereas ENSs did not experience these problems.

KW - verb collocations

KW - English language learners

KW - primary education

KW - science

KW - content and language integrated learning

M3 - Journal article

VL - 13

SP - 3

EP - 29

JO - The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL

JF - The European Journal of Applied Linguistics and TEFL

SN - 2192-1032

IS - 2

ER -