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The Versatile ELT Blog

A space for short articles about topics ​of interest to language teachers.
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22 Takeaways

14/9/2024

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22 Takeaways

At the end of the new edition of Discovering English with VersaText, published yesterday, there is a list of 22 takeaways. These are the points that I hope I have instilled in the readers. They embrace teaching, learning, creativity, metalinguistics, metacognition (all things meta TBH), guided discovery, text, grammar, vocabulary, pronunciation, depth, respect and colour.

Here they are.
  1. Text is the starting point.
  2. The multiple affordances of texts and tasks.
  3. The Six Pillars of Vocabulary – the properties of words.
  4. All properties of words beget language learning tasks.
  5. The task activates learning.
  6. Relationships between words carry meaning.
  7. Relationships between words and grammar carry meaning.
  8. Disabuse students of the idea that vocabulary is random.
  9. Reveal the visible patterns in language – patterns of normal usage.
  10. Respect students' intelligence.
  11. Students benefit from guided discovery.
  12. Flatter students' intelligence by introducing terminology and its etymology.
  13. Tell students the truth or lead them to discover it.
  14. Train students in the art and science of observation and pattern hunting.
  15. Take students on the journey from analysis to synthesis.
  16. Prepare students to become lifelong learners.
  17. Let them bask in the wonder of meaning creation.
  18. Demystify English at all levels of the Hierarchy of Language.
  19. Accept that students have to do the learning and teachers have to lead them to finding their own optimal paths.
  20. Equip students with the information and skills they need to make guided discovery work for them.
  21. Don't accept students' narrow view of language as a foundation for their wish list when asked what they would like to do or like to learn.
  22. Never stop asking students, HDYK.
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If I were a TKT, Trinity, CELTA or DELTA candidate, a CLIL, EMI, ESP or a private language teacher, or a primary or secondary teacher – indeed any creative teacher who develops lessons that revolve around texts, I would be devouring this book for its wealth of opportunities to create vocabulary, grammar and discourse tasks through one text at a time.
VERSATEXT
Originally, a Kindle only, it is now also a print book with white space for readers' answers, notes, comments. The new edition reflects all the updates we have made to the free, online software, and AI appears at pertinent moments.
The Kindle and book are available from Amazon.
Amazon UK
Amazon US
And there is also an e-course which has received high praise from the too few people who've done it so far. In fact, one of those students has invited me as a guest on her podcast next month.
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VersaText course
​Should you be interested in all things VersaText, or even some of them, feel free to join the Facebook group too.

VersaText Facebook Group
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One swallow does not summer make

11/6/2024

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One swallow does not summer make

In a book on teaching collocation, Michael Hoey (1948–2021), one of Britain's leading linguists, wrote:
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I was never sure whether the context was  natural  or 
typical. Unless one knows that the collocation one is learning is absolutely characteristic of the way the word is used, more than half the value one gets from learning the word in its context disappears. (Hoey 2000).
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​Hoey in fact studied foreign languages so that he could experience the processes of language learning and the practical applications of linguistic and pedagogical theory. When he was observing language in context, that is by reading and listening, he would notice certain collocations but he needed proof of their typicality before he could consider them worth learning. Just because someone has combined a pair of words does not mean that this combination is a typical formulation in the language. The lexicographer, Patrick Hanks (1940–2024) felt the same: Authenticity alone is not enough. Evidence of conventionality is also needed (2013:5).

Some years before these two Englishman made these pronouncements, Aristotle (384–322 BC) observed that one swallow does not a summer make. Other languages have their own version of this proverb, sometimes using quite different metaphors, but all making the same point.

​In order to ascertain that an observed collocation is natural, typical, characteristic or conventional, it is necessary to hunt it down, and there is no better hunting ground for linguistic features than databases containing large samples of the language, a.k.a corpora. In the second paragraph, Hoey experienced the processes … Is experience a process a typical collocation? This is the data that CorpusMate yields:
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In the same paragraph, we have the following collocation candidates:
  • study language
  • foreign language
  • apply theory
  • observe language
  • notice collocation
  • combine words
  • typical formulation

Here is some more data from CorpusMate.
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In the following example, we have a wildcard which allows for one element to appear between the two words of the collocation. Even in these first 12 of the 59 results, other patterns are evident.
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The process of validating your findings through multiple sources or methods is known as triangulation, and it is an essential stage in most research. When we train students to triangulate their linguistic observations, it is quite likely that they are familiar with this process from their other school subjects.

This is not just a quantitative observation, i.e. this collocation occurs X times in the corpus. It is qualitative as well: the students observe other elements of the cotext, such as the use of other words and grammar structures that the collocation occurs in. They might also observe contextual features that relate to the genres and registers in which the target structure occurs.

They are being trained in task-based linguistics as citizen scientists, engaging their higher order thinking skills as pattern hunters. This metacognitive training is a skill for life that will extend far beyond the life of any language course they are undertaking.

Triangulation does not apply only to collocation. Any aspect of language can be explored in this way. You may have noticed the word order in the idiom: does not a summer make. Many people have run with this curious word order and exploited it creatively. It is thus a snowclone. Here are some examples from SkELL.
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Respect our students' intelligence and ​equip them to learn language from language.

References

Croswaithe, P. & Baisa, V. (2024) A user-friendly corpus tool for disciplinary data-driven learning: Introducing CorpusMate International Journal of Corpus Linguistics.
    
Hanks, P. (2013) Lexical Analysis: Norms and Exploitations. MIT.
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Hoey, M. (2000) A world beyond collocation: new perspectives on vocabulary teaching. Teaching Collocation. Further Developments in the Lexical Approach. LTP (ed. Lewis, M.)
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Collocation and VersaText

4/5/2024

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Collocation and VersaText

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I had an email from a teacher who loves using my VersaText tool with his students. In addition to the very welcome and rarely received praise for VersaText, he was enquiring into the possibility of adding a collocation feature. As you know, VersaText works with single texts, its slogan being, “learning language from language, one text at a time”, collocations are vanishingly rare. In fact, “vanishingly rare” is a strong collocation in English. Check out the examples in #SkELL.
Vanishingly Rare
And this is the point. SkELL’s #corpus of approximately one billion words in thousands of texts vacuumed off the web focusses on collocations that can be observed in a large sample of the language. SkELL stands for Sketch Engine for Language Learners, and a word sketch is a table of collocates. You can see, for example, the verbs commonly used with trouble in the role of object. 

Sketch Engine’s main tool is its word sketch, hence its name, and it offers a plethora of sophisticated manipulations that reveal this pervasive core language pattern in hundreds of corpora in dozens of languages.​
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#Collocation is defined variously. First and foremost, collocation consists of two content words of different parts of speech. Compound nouns and adjectives, phrasal and delexical verbs are not collocations. And neither are words that combine with that/ -ing / inf / wh-/prepostions. These are colligations and offer very little choice, if any. You’ve all seen gap fills in coursebooks and exams that test this. Collocation does permit some variation, but within limits of acceptability if you are going to use the patterns of normal usage of the language.

One category of definitions of collocation revolves around statistical frequency. These definitions rely on the number of times words occur in close proximity to each other. The verb collocates of trouble, for example, occur frequently within four words before and/or after the noun in SkELL's huge sample of English.

Other definitions of collocation are phraseological: cause trouble is the core of a clause, which is the essential structure that creates Messages, which in turn constitutes text. Up the Hierarchy of Language we go! 
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Most key words in most texts collocate with different items because the author is telling us something new about the word. And this is why a collocation tool in VersaText would be by and large redundant.
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One thing we can be sure of in a text is that the author is not going to repeat the same message repeatedly, again and again, over and over, unless they have some rhetorical reason for doing so.  Here is an example. In VersaText’s sample text, Learning Zone (a transcript of a TED Talk), we see that the verb spend is frequently used with time, and with other time words, e.g. minutes, hours, our lives. It occurs 13 times in the text. Time occurs 28 times in the text and is used thus: ​
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CTRL F in the browser highlights the nominated word as it occurs in the cotext of the target word.
Improve occurs 15 times in the text, each time in a different Message. This is far more typical of words in text than a frequently used collocation like spend time. 
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Go to VersaText, select the Learning Zone text from the list, then click Wordcloud at the top. If you want the lemma of improve, for example, choose the lemma radio button under the word cloud. Click on any word to see its concordance in this text. This motivates many discovery learning tasks for the students.

If you want to learn more about studying and teaching English with VersaText, click the Course button at the top of the VersaText pages.

My phraseological approach to collocations in single texts is the Word Constellation. See my blog post linked below. 

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This is a word constellation. It is built upon a VersaText concordance of the word language in text about language learning.
Word Constellations blog post
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