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The present study investigated whether the teaching of L2 vocabulary with still cartoon pictures and animated cartoon pictures would result in a significant difference in second language learners receptive and productive knowledge of the target words. Also, the effect of test type (receptive vs. productive) on participants retention of the target words was examined. Finally, the study tried to find out whether the semantic category of vocabulary words influences the rate of successful vocabulary retention across picture types. For the purpose, a group of 17 ESL students from a Midwestern…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The present study investigated whether the teaching of L2 vocabulary with still cartoon pictures and animated cartoon pictures would result in a significant difference in second language learners receptive and productive knowledge of the target words. Also, the effect of test type (receptive vs. productive) on participants retention of the target words was examined. Finally, the study tried to find out whether the semantic category of vocabulary words influences the rate of successful vocabulary retention across picture types. For the purpose, a group of 17 ESL students from a Midwestern University participated in both treatments with still and animated pictures, followed by vocabulary tests. The results showed that over 80% of the target words were successfully retrieved on the receptive knowledge tests vs. only about 40% successful retrieval on the productive knowledge tests. Yet, the results did not reveal significant differences in vocabulary gain due to picture type as both treatments showed similar success rate of retention of the target words, especially in view of receptive knowledge.
Autorenporträt
James Ahikpa graduated with a Masters Degree in TESOL ( Teaching English as a Second Language) from Southern Illinois University-Carbondale. He also earned a Masters Degree in English language and literature from the University of Abidjan. He taught English to High School students in Abidjan.He specializes in Computer-Assisted Language Learning.