Title of article :
Lexical Complexity as a Function of Task Type and Proficiency Level in the Speech Monologs of Iranian EFL Learners
Author/Authors :
Bayazidi, Aso Department of English - Faculty of Persian Literature and Foreign Languages - University of Tabriz, Tabriz, Iran , Ansarin, Ali-Akbar Department of English - Faculty of Persian Literature and Foreign Languages - University of Tabriz, Tabriz, Iran , Mohammadnia, Zhila Department of English Language and Literature - Faculty of Literature and Humanities - Urmia University, Urmia, Iran
Abstract :
Despite the abundance of research evaluating the effects of task complexity, task types,
and planning on the complexity, accuracy, and fluency of the language produced by
learners, most studies have focused on the syntactic aspect of complexity, with very few
studies investigating the lexical part of complexity. Such studies explored the lexical
performance of learners through using merely one measure of lexical complexity
(namely diversity). The present study is an attempt to further explore the effects of task
type and proficiency level on different aspects of lexical complexity of spontaneous
speech monologs produced by intermediate and advanced Iranian EFL learners. To this
end, 35 intermediate and advanced Iranian learners of English performed three different
speaking tasks: an argumentation, a description and a narration task. The speech
monologs were coded for three different aspects of lexical complexity: diversity, density
and sophistication. Two-way repeated-measures ANOVAs were conducted to evaluate
the main effects of task type (the within-subjects variable) and proficiency level (the
between-subjects variable) on lexical complexity. The results showed that task type and
proficiency level both significantly affect lexical complexity in the participants’ task
performance. The argumentation task yielded the highest scores for diversity and
density, while the highest sophistication score was obtained for the narration task. There
was no interaction between task type and proficiency level for the diversity and
sophistication scores, and the advanced learners consistently got higher diversity and
sophistication scores for all the three tasks, while there was an interaction between the
two variables for the density scores; the advanced learners got higher density scores for
the description and narration tasks but not on the argumentation task.
Keywords :
Task Type , Sophistication , Lexical Complexity , Density , Diversity
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics