• Title of article

    EFL Textbook Evaluation: An Analysis of Readability and Vocabulary Profiler of Four Corners Book Series

  • Author/Authors

    Malverdi Varzaneh ، Milad - Islamic Azad University, Isfahan (Khorasgan) Branch , Heidari Darani ، Laya - Islamic Azad University, Falavarjan Branch

  • Pages
    11
  • From page
    47
  • To page
    57
  • Abstract
    This study aimed to investigate whether there is any significant relationship between the readability and vocabulary profile including the most frequent words (K1 words) and academic word list (AWL) of reading passages of Four Corners series which were EFL textbooks. To determine the readability of the texts, the Flesch–Kincaid (1975) readability test was used, while the texts academic word list and most frequent words which were the indicators of vocabulary profiler were calculated by Cobb s (2002) vocabulary profiler test. In order to analyze the data obtained Pearson Product-Moment correlation coefficients were exploited. With respect to the relationship between readability and most frequent words, there was no significant correlation between readability and K1 words. This means that whatever the text is more difficult, the number of K1 words does not change while it was thought if the text is more difficult the number of K1 words is lower. Concerning the relationship between readability and academic word list, no significant correlation between readability and academic word list was observed, either. In other words, the readability of these texts is not due to their academic word list. It can be concluded that some other factors such as sentence length, syntactic complexity, and learners background knowledge might contribute to the difficulty of the texts.
  • Keywords
    Vocabulary , reading comprehension , readability , word frequency , K1 words , Academic Word List
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Foreign Language Teaching and Research
  • Serial Year
    2018
  • Journal title
    International Journal of Foreign Language Teaching and Research
  • Record number

    2459741