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Offshore and onsite placement testing for English pathway programmes
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In: SCU College (2018)
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Lexical facility: size, recognition speed and consistency as dimensions of second language vocabulary knowledge
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Offshore and onsite placement testing for English pathway programmes
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Vocabulary recognition skill as a screening tool in English-as-a-Lingua-Franca university settings
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In: SCU College (2016)
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Fractionating English language proficiency: Policy and practice in Australian higher education
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University EAP pathway placement testing: scoring vocabulary test performance
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In: SCU College (2015)
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Phraseology used to comment on results in the discussion section of applied linguistics quantitative research articles
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Word recognition skill and academic success across disciplines in an ELF university setting
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In: SCU College (2014)
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The role of word recognition skill in academic success across disciplines in an ELF university setting
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Identifying academically at-risk students in an English-as-a-Lingua-Franca university setting
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Recognition vocabulary skill as a predictor of academic English performance and academic achievement in English
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In: SCU College (2013)
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Recognition vocabulary knowledge as a predictor of academic performance in an English as a foreign language setting
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Focus on the forms: from recognition practice in Chinese vocabulary learning
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Computational models of second language sentence processing
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Abstract:
Sentence comprehension draws on multiple levels of linguistic knowledge, including the phonological, orthographic, lexical, syntactic, and discoursal. This article focuses on the computational models of second language sentence processing. Understanding the computational mechanisms responsible for using this knowledge in real time provides basic insights into how language and the mind work. For a cognitive theory of second language acquisition, a better understanding of how the second language learner develops the capacity to process sentences fluently also has important implications for theories of acquisition and instruction. This article examines two perspectives on written sentence comprehension in the second language. The two approaches considered are syntax based and constraint based. The approaches make fundamentally different assumptions concerning the nature of linguistic representation and how the human speech processing mechanism uses this knowledge in online comprehension. The two perspectives also represent a basic division between formalist and functionalist/usage based approaches to second language learning and use.
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Keyword:
1200 Arts and Humanities; 3300 Social Sciences; Computational models; Lexical; Orthographic; Phonological; Sentence comprehension; Syntactic
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URL: https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:234557
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