Profiling lexical diversity in college-level writing

The present paper reports on a study that examined the contribution of lexical frequency to lexical diversity in narrative texts composed by 119 multilingual and monolingual English-speaking students enrolled in first-year college writing courses. The Measure of Textual Lexical Diversity (MTLD) quan...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inVocabulary Learning and Instruction Vol. 6; no. 1; pp. 61 - 74
Main Author González, Melanie C.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Castledown Publishers 11.07.2024
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ISSN2981-9954
2981-9954
DOI10.7820/vli.v06.1.Gonzalez

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Summary:The present paper reports on a study that examined the contribution of lexical frequency to lexical diversity in narrative texts composed by 119 multilingual and monolingual English-speaking students enrolled in first-year college writing courses. The Measure of Textual Lexical Diversity (MTLD) quantifed lexical diversity and the BNC-COCA 25 strand in Lextutor’s VocabProfle Compleat sorted the words according to frequency band. Overall, results from statistical analyses indicated that sample’s lexical diversity was not significantly impacted by the use of high-frequency (1,000-3,000 bands) or low-frequency (9,000+ bands) terms. Instead, texts showed greater differences in the mid-frequency (3,000-9,000) bands (p<0.05). There were also significant differences between MTLD writers’ written productive use of mid-frequency words. Consequently, findings suggest that mid-frequency vocabulary may play a greater role in academic writing quality than the attention it is typically given in the L2 writing classroom.
ISSN:2981-9954
2981-9954
DOI:10.7820/vli.v06.1.Gonzalez