TY - JOUR
T1 - Assessing young learners’ vocabulary learning via communicative tasks
AU - Teng, Mark Feng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Association for Language Learning.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This quasi-experimental study investigated the effects of communicative tasks on vocabulary learning among young second-language learners. Two groups of primary school first-grade students in Hong Kong participated–one receiving communicative task-based instruction and the other following the standard curriculum (control). The intervention, grounded in communicative language teaching (CLT) principles, involved storytelling and interactive tasks designed to promote vocabulary negotiation and retention. Pre-, post- and delayed tests assessed word recognition and production. Results from repeated-measures ANOVA revealed that the experimental group showed significantly greater gains in both recognition and production compared to the control group, though recognition improved more than production. While vocabulary knowledge declined over time–a common finding in such studies–the intervention demonstrated sustained benefits, with the experimental group retaining higher scores in delayed tests. The findings suggested selective learner engagement, suggesting task design and word relevance influence attention. Despite expected outcomes (e.g. recognition surpassing production), the study underscores the potential of communicative tasks to enhance vocabulary acquisition, albeit with challenges in maintaining long-term retention. Implications for integrating communicative tasks and optimising engagement in CLT are discussed.
AB - This quasi-experimental study investigated the effects of communicative tasks on vocabulary learning among young second-language learners. Two groups of primary school first-grade students in Hong Kong participated–one receiving communicative task-based instruction and the other following the standard curriculum (control). The intervention, grounded in communicative language teaching (CLT) principles, involved storytelling and interactive tasks designed to promote vocabulary negotiation and retention. Pre-, post- and delayed tests assessed word recognition and production. Results from repeated-measures ANOVA revealed that the experimental group showed significantly greater gains in both recognition and production compared to the control group, though recognition improved more than production. While vocabulary knowledge declined over time–a common finding in such studies–the intervention demonstrated sustained benefits, with the experimental group retaining higher scores in delayed tests. The findings suggested selective learner engagement, suggesting task design and word relevance influence attention. Despite expected outcomes (e.g. recognition surpassing production), the study underscores the potential of communicative tasks to enhance vocabulary acquisition, albeit with challenges in maintaining long-term retention. Implications for integrating communicative tasks and optimising engagement in CLT are discussed.
KW - CLT
KW - Communicative tasks
KW - vocabulary acquisition
KW - word production
KW - word recognition
KW - young learners
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105005576345
U2 - 10.1080/09571736.2025.2505891
DO - 10.1080/09571736.2025.2505891
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105005576345
SN - 0957-1736
VL - 53
SP - 761
EP - 775
JO - Language Learning Journal
JF - Language Learning Journal
IS - 6
ER -