Exploring Word Frequency and Usage Patterns in English Language Learning

 
Smooth sailing through
the sea of words
 
 
Hugh Dellar
National Geographic Learning / Lexical Lab
 
Put the words in each group in order of frequency.
You have two minutes.
 
1
 
ambitious / fun / serious / hard-working
2
 
arise / supermarket / store / beard
3
 
trademark / controversy / criticism / headline
4
 
paramedic / contend / Muslim / whereby
5
 
singer / in terms of /
 after the 
/ by the time
 
You have three minutes to write examples of
some of these words /
 
structures.
 
ambitious
beard
Muslim
paramedic
criticism
The past continuous
arise
in terms of
whereby
 
 
Assessing frequency
 
serious 
  
fun 
  
ambitious 
  
hard-working
122
  
52
  
16
  
2
 
arise 
  
store  
  
supermarket 
 
beard
96
  
93
  
17
  
9
 
criticism
  
controversy 
 
headline
  
trademark
47
  
21
  
16
  
2
 
whereby
  
Muslim 
  
contend 
  
paramedic
20
  
17
  
9
  
1
 
a
fter the 
  
in terms of 
 
by the time
 
singer
219
  
99
  
37
  
18
 
 
Numbers refer to occurrences per million in BNC:
source 
phrasesinenglish.org
  / 
Macmillan dictionary
 
The attraction of simple examples
 
She is ambitious.
He has a beard.
She is Muslim.
He is a paramedic.
She faces a lot of criticism.
The phone rang while I was having a bath.
A problem has arisen.
My job is bad in terms of money.
whereby ….
 
Explaining the attraction
 
availability bias
representational bias / simple 
X is Y 
pattern
(ELT) priming
 
 
 
 
 
Frequent words:
- are what students will see / hear and want to speak / write.
- might be the ‘glue’ as much as grammar.
 
Single words / simple examples:
- may not illustrate meaning.
- may not reflect actual use.
- will not provide sufficient exposure to 
grammar
!
-
 will not recycle frequent words sufficiently.
 
We crave simplicity and yet . . . chess masters & the 10,000 hours
 
Why it might be a problem
 
Getting better at judging frequency
 
 
http://www.macmillandictionary.com/red-word-game/
Google
Find a friend
 
 
 
ambitious
 
adverb - adjective
adjective - noun
 
G
e
t
t
i
n
g
 
b
e
t
t
e
r
 
a
t
 
g
i
v
i
n
g
 
e
x
a
m
p
l
e
s
:
 
S
T
A
R
T
 
w
i
t
h
 
c
o
l
l
o
c
a
t
i
o
n
 
W
h
a
t
 
a
b
o
u
t
 
c
o
l
l
o
c
a
t
i
o
n
s
 
o
f
 
c
o
l
l
o
c
a
t
i
o
n
s
?
 
e
x
t
r
e
m
e
l
y
,
 
h
u
g
e
l
y
,
 
o
v
e
r
l
y
,
 
t
o
o
,
 
w
i
l
d
l
y
ruthlessly
artistically, politically, socially
attempt, plan, programme,  proposal, venture
aim, goal, target
 
adv - adj - noun
adj - noun - verb
verb -adj - noun
noun - verb - adj - noun
 
 
overly ambitious
face criticism
 
From collocation to story to example
 
 
How did the workshop go?
> I was 
overly ambitious 
as usual. I didn’t
do half of what I’d planned.
> It was OK, but I was 
overly ambitious 
and
I ran out of time / I didn’t finish
 
 
Cameron has 
faced a lot of criticism 
about
his leadership, because he’s seen as
arrogant.
 
Ask yourself . . . When? Why? Who to?
 
beard
Muslim
paramedic
whereby
 
 
 
Who was the guy with the beard? I haven’t seen him before.
 
As a Muslim, I believe we have a responsibility to help others.
 
When the paramedics arrived, his heart had stopped beating.
T
hey got it going again and then rushed him to hospital.
 
Immunization is the process whereby a person is made immune
or resistant to an infectious disease, typically by the
administration of a vaccine.
 
From examples to noticing: grammar
 
Who was the guy with the beard? I haven’t seen him before.
 
As a Muslim, I believe we have a responsibility to help everyone.
 
When the paramedics arrived his heart had stopped beating, they got it going
again and then rushed him to hospital.
 
Immunization is the process whereby a person is made immune or resistant
to an infectious disease, typically by the administration of a vaccine
 
How did the workshop go?
>OK, but  I was overly ambitious as usual and I ran out of time / I didn’t finish
 
Cameron has faced a lot of criticism about his leadership, because he’s seen
as arrogant and out-of-touch.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
-
 Why 
haven’t seen
 
him before?
-
 Why 
had stopped beating
 
not 
stopped beating
?
-
 Why a person 
is made 
immune
 
not a person 
made 
immune?
 
F
r
o
m
 
e
x
a
m
p
l
e
s
 
t
o
 
n
o
t
i
c
i
n
g
:
 
p
a
t
t
e
r
n
s
 
a
n
d
 
v
o
c
a
b
u
l
a
r
y
 
Who was the guy with the beard? I haven’t seen him before.
 
As a Muslim, I believe we have a responsibility to help everyone.
 
When the paramedics arrived his heart had stopped beating, they got it going
again and then rushed him to hospital.
 
Immunization is the process whereby a person is made immune or resistant
to an infectious disease, typically by the administration of a vaccine
 
How did the workshop go?
> OK, but  I was overly ambitious as usual and I ran out of time / I didn’t finish
 
Cameron has faced a lot of criticism about his leadership, because he’s seen
as arrogant and out-of-touch.
 
 
 
Who was the guy with ………..? I haven’t seen him before.
 
As a ………., I believe ……. .
 
When the paramedics arrived...
… stopped / broke down .... got it going again
 rush him to hospital
 
…….. is the process whereby ...
resistant to
an infectious disease,  
[academic language]
 
How did …. go?
as usual / ran out of time
 
faced a lot of criticism 
about
 ...
…. Is seen as (being) …
 
Questions that check understanding and generate language
 
Why might you 
... face a lot of criticism?
How might you feel if 
... you run out of time in an exam?
What might you say if 
... you’re asked how an interview went?
What happens if 
... a person is ruthlessly ambitious?
What's the opposite of 
... a highly infectious disease?
What verbs go with 
... beard?
What else 
.... might paramedics often do?
 
 
Exploring networks around words create alternative kinds of
lexical sets.
 
Problems with traditional lexical sets
 
– A f
ocus on topic vocabulary will tend towards the less
frequent. Less useful? Less efficient?
Learning words in hyponomous sets or similar may be less
efficient.
 May also 
be less easy to turn into usage and
conversation
The way we organise things is not how we acquire them.
The brain organises language in lots of different networks.
When we are ‘texting’ rather than categorising we use
different networks.
Collocations / groups of words may have different networks
to single words.
 They 
may be as easy to learn as single
words
.
 
 
 
S
o
m
e
 
f
i
n
a
l
 
t
h
o
u
g
h
t
s
 
 
 
Recognizing what’s frequent and useful is not a given.
 
Giving good examples is difficult especially if they
require complex sentences.
 
Need to notice and plan language within coursebooks.
 
And some final tips . . .
 
1
 
Plan what language - not what activity.
2
 
Plan not just to complete aims, but to allow for students’ talk.
3
 
Think about what students might say in 
Speaking
 tasks.
4
 
Write dialogues for particular situations.
5
 
Brainstorm new lexical sets / networks.
6
 
Write your own exercises.
 
Find a buddy and ...
7
 
Discuss interesting errors you came across.
8
 
Discuss interesting questions I was asked in class today.
9
 
Discuss new language you'd never taught / thought about teaching until it
 
came up in class.
10
 
Discuss what you learnt about your students.
 
www.lexicallab.com
 
 
 
 
 
 
www.facebook.com/hughdellarandrewwalkley
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Dive into the world of word frequency and usage patterns to enhance your English language skills. Discover the significance of common words, their placement, and examples that illustrate their meanings. Uncover the attraction of simplicity in language learning and how it impacts comprehension and retention. Learn why understanding frequency is crucial for effective communication and language proficiency improvement.


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  1. Smooth sailing through the sea of words Hugh Dellar National Geographic Learning / Lexical Lab

  2. Put the words in each group in order of frequency. You have two minutes. 1 2 3 4 5 ambitious / fun / serious / hard-working arise / supermarket / store / beard trademark / controversy / criticism / headline paramedic / contend / Muslim / whereby singer / in terms of / after the / by the time

  3. You have three minutes to write examples of some of these words / structures. ambitious beard Muslim paramedic criticism The past continuous arise in terms of whereby

  4. Assessing frequency serious 122 fun 52 ambitious 16 hard-working 2 arise 96 store 93 supermarket 17 beard 9 criticism 47 controversy 21 headline 16 trademark 2 whereby 20 Muslim 17 contend 9 paramedic 1 after the 219 in terms of 99 by the time 37 singer 18 Numbers refer to occurrences per million in BNC: source phrasesinenglish.org / Macmillan dictionary

  5. The attraction of simple examples She is ambitious. He has a beard. She is Muslim. He is a paramedic. She faces a lot of criticism. The phone rang while I was having a bath. A problem has arisen. My job is bad in terms of money. whereby .

  6. Explaining the attraction availability bias representational bias / simple X is Y pattern (ELT) priming

  7. Why it might be a problem Frequent words: - are what students will see / hear and want to speak / write. - might be the glue as much as grammar. Single words / simple examples: - may not illustrate meaning. - may not reflect actual use. - will not provide sufficient exposure to grammar! - will not recycle frequent words sufficiently. We crave simplicity and yet . . . chess masters & the 10,000 hours

  8. Getting better at judging frequency http://www.macmillandictionary.com/red-word-game/ Google Find a friend

  9. Getting better at giving examples: START with collocation ambitious adverb - adjective adjective - noun

  10. What about collocations of collocations? extremely, hugely, overly, too, wildly ruthlessly artistically, politically, socially attempt, plan, programme, proposal, venture aim, goal, target adv - adj - noun adj - noun - verb verb -adj - noun noun - verb - adj - noun

  11. From collocation to story to example overly ambitious face criticism

  12. How did the workshop go? > I was overly ambitious as usual. I didn t do half of what I d planned. > It was OK, but I was overly ambitious and I ran out of time / I didn t finish Cameron has faced a lot of criticism about his leadership, because he s seen as arrogant.

  13. Ask yourself . . . When? Why? Who to? beard Muslim paramedic whereby

  14. Who was the guy with the beard? I havent seen him before. As a Muslim, I believe we have a responsibility to help others. When the paramedics arrived, his heart had stopped beating. They got it going again and then rushed him to hospital. Immunization is the process whereby a person is made immune or resistant to an infectious disease, typically by the administration of a vaccine.

  15. From examples to noticing: grammar Who was the guy with the beard? I haven t seen him before. As a Muslim, I believe we have a responsibility to help everyone. When the paramedics arrived his heart had stopped beating, they got it going again and then rushed him to hospital. Immunization is the process whereby a person is made immune or resistant to an infectious disease, typically by the administration of a vaccine How did the workshop go? >OK, but I was overly ambitious as usual and I ran out of time / I didn t finish Cameron has faced a lot of criticism about his leadership, because he s seen as arrogant and out-of-touch.

  16. - Why havent seen him before? - Why had stopped beating not stopped beating? - Why a person is made immune not a person made immune?

  17. From examples to noticing: patterns and vocabulary Who was the guy with the beard? I haven t seen him before. As a Muslim, I believe we have a responsibility to help everyone. When the paramedics arrived his heart had stopped beating, they got it going again and then rushed him to hospital. Immunization is the process whereby a person is made immune or resistant to an infectious disease, typically by the administration of a vaccine How did the workshop go? > OK, but I was overly ambitious as usual and I ran out of time / I didn t finish Cameron has faced a lot of criticism about his leadership, because he s seen as arrogant and out-of-touch.

  18. Who was the guy with ..? I havent seen him before. As a ., I believe . . When the paramedics arrived... stopped / broke down .... got it going again rush him to hospital .. is the process whereby ... resistant to an infectious disease, [academic language] How did . go? as usual / ran out of time faced a lot of criticism about ... . Is seen as (being)

  19. Questions that check understanding and generate language Why might you ... face a lot of criticism? How might you feel if ... you run out of time in an exam? What might you say if ... you re asked how an interview went? What happens if ... a person is ruthlessly ambitious? What's the opposite of ... a highly infectious disease? What verbs go with ... beard? What else .... might paramedics often do? Exploring networks around words create alternative kinds of lexical sets.

  20. Problems with traditional lexical sets A focus on topic vocabulary will tend towards the less frequent. Less useful? Less efficient? Learning words in hyponomous sets or similar may be less efficient. May also be less easy to turn into usage and conversation The way we organise things is not how we acquire them. The brain organises language in lots of different networks. When we are texting rather than categorising we use different networks. Collocations / groups of words may have different networks to single words. They may be as easy to learn as single words.

  21. Some final thoughts Recognizing what s frequent and useful is not a given. Giving good examples is difficult especially if they require complex sentences. Need to notice and plan language within coursebooks.

  22. And some final tips . . . 1 2 3 4 5 6 Plan what language - not what activity. Plan not just to complete aims, but to allow for students talk. Think about what students might say in Speaking tasks. Write dialogues for particular situations. Brainstorm new lexical sets / networks. Write your own exercises. Find a buddy and ... 7 8 9 Discuss interesting errors you came across. Discuss interesting questions I was asked in class today. Discuss new language you'd never taught / thought about teaching until it came up in class. Discuss what you learnt about your students. 10

  23. www.lexicallab.com www.facebook.com/hughdellarandrewwalkley

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