The 2009 AE
Conference Iso University, Kaohsiung
1
Interactive Approaches for Vocabulary Teaching
Grace
Hui Chin Lin
PhD, Texas A&M University, College Station
MS, University
of Southern California
Abstract
Vocabulary acquisition research has been paid attention these years (e.g. Beck,
McKeown & McCaslin, 1983; Harley, 1996; Huckin, Haynes, & Coady, 1993; Zahar, Cobb &
Spada, 2001). A serious methodologies had been reported,
including applying learner
dictionaries (Nesi, 1999; Tribble, 2003), using forms of visual glossing (Al-Seghayer, 2001),
and so on. This study argues that because the research of vocabulary teaching methods has
not a long history, since 1999 as Read (2004) mentions,
English teachers should pay
additional efforts in learning how to raise our students’ vocabulary proficiencies through
updated ways that have been provided to be effective.
This study aims on investigating the pedagogies of language vocabulary. In addition, it
reports the author’s perceptions for specialized and modernized techniques of teaching
vocabularies through interactive approaches that River (2000)
suggests and provides the
results of a research plan conducted in National Sun Yat-sen University, Kaohsiung of Taiwan
where twenty-six learners learned higher-intermediate level
vocabularies in a required
general English course. In the class of twenty-six students, the researcher as well as the
trainer applied teacher-centered audio-lingual in the first two
months and student-student
interactive approaches to vocabulary teaching in the later two months (the third and the fourth
month). The statistical results displayed that the twenty-six students’ performances of
memorizing the higher-level vocabularies were significantly different before and after the
treatments of student-centered interactive approaches. The results
of this study imply that
teacher-centered approaches should be replaced by student-centered approaches and
interactive strategies when teaching vocabulary.