1338 Fat learner's dictionaries are finished! So what do I do with word lists?
austraLasia 1338
Fat learner's dictionaries are finished! So what do I
do with word lists?
ROME: 25th November 2005 -- Several weeks ago this
newsletter promoted a set of English word lists with the 'good' news
(and some demonstration of its effectiveness) that anything up to 95%
of any normal Salesian text could be covered with the knowledge of a
mere three and a half thousand words. Gratifyingly, these lists
were then downloaded by most of the formation communities around the
English-speaking world, plus another dozen interested
individuals. Then cones the question: any ideas on what we do
next? 'Learn them' could be one answer! But, gentle reader,
you are really asking how best to learn them are you not?
Again just in the space of a paragraph or two,
compacted information which you need to explore further, here are some
thoughts applicable to learning - or teaching - these lists.
(1) The lists, except for the SWL (Salesian WL), are
in 'families' - effectively a list is reduced by a third. Learn
the head word - the others beneath it are manipulations of that.
(2) Never, oh never simply try to learn lists.
Words rarely if ever exist alone. They keep company. Learn
the company they keep. Learn groups, chunks, phrases, form
patterns (V + Adv etc)
(3) Work with a good monolingual dictionary.
And at this point - fat dictionaries are finished, I mean, today's good
English-English dictionary is based on corpus studies. The Oxford
Advanced Learner's Dictionary broke away from conventional 'school' an
native speaker dictionaries by providing information about the valency pattern of verbs. Good dictionaries now
contain not just more words because English is developing
exponentially, but usage comments, register, when and when not to use a
word and so on. Dictionaries have gone from 50,000 to 80,000
words in the space of 40 years - plus the comments just
mentioned! They are bursting their covers. You just can't carry
one around anymore!!
The solution is digital. The 80,000 word plus
comments variety can fit on a hand-held or CD medium with room to
spare. Searching is fast and flexible and that's what you
need. The hand-held approach has been developed in South East
Asia, so it's more for bilingual (e.g. Japanese-English) use. Not
part of what I am saying here. CD's are interesting - driven by
pedagogical needs mostly. Can be costly. Best offers seem to be: "The First
English Language Teaching Multimedia CD-ROM" (Longman Interactive
English Dictionary); "Helping learners with real English" (COBUILD
on CD-ROM); "The easy way to improve your English" (Longman
Interactive American Dictionary); "The dictionary that really
teaches English" (Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary on CD-ROM).
And then there's the Internet dictionaries.
Largely outside the control of pedagogues. The most popular ones are in
the public domain. There's the Hypertext Webster Interface and
the Roget's Thesaurus. Beyond that there's Wordnet and Wordbot. This
last mentioned is what you might call a 'bottom-up'dictionary.
Anybody contributes -and that can be both good and bad!
From an Australian reader comes this recommendation
of a good learning site - but the pronunciation taught as 'perfect' is
an American pronunciation! Does it really matter? You may
wish to try this site first, because pronunciation aside, it is
good: http://www.learnersdictionary.com/
VOCABULARY
valency: chemical term but used in
language to describe things like transitive or intransitive or
ditransitive verbs - how many objects a verb can have in simple terms.
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