Teaching about vocabulary: Colligation
Recently, I gave a talk at an EAP conference at St
Andrews University about encouraging EAP students to learn vocabulary
independently. I argued that rather than trying to teach students all the vocab
items they need to know in class (arguably an impossible task), it’s more
effective to teach them about vocabulary. By that I mean, teaching about some
of the key features of English (academic) vocabulary that will help students to
better understand the words they come across in their studies; to know what to
look out for and how to find out more (using dictionaries, etc.).
I mentioned several features of vocabulary that teachers
might focus on in class including lexicogrammatical features (e.g. countable
and uncountable nouns), word formation, collocation, dependent prepositions,
register and connotation. The feature that people seemed less familiar with,
and which several people asked me about, was colligation. I’ll fess up now that
despite having been involved in dictionaries and vocab teaching for many years,
it’s a relatively new term to me too. That’s not to say I wasn’t familiar with
the general concept, but I didn’t have a nice neat term for it.
So where collocation is the inclination of lexical items
to appear together, colligation is the tendency of words to appear together
with particular grammatical structures or forms. Probably the most obvious
example that appears in coursebooks is where particular words are typically followed
by a verb in an infinitive or gerund form; decide
to do, enjoy doing, tendency to do, avoid doing, etc. But it can also
include, for example, the way that certain words tend to be used in negative
constructions;
There seems to be no need for government regulation.
Established
universities have traditionally not
felt the need to market their services.
It’s the kind of information that learner’s dictionary
typically highlight in example sentences, either by bolding the key elements or
sometimes using a ‘frame’;
[+ to infinitive] I
can’t afford to buy a house.
[+ that] The Prime
Minister has announced that public
spending will be increased next year.
(Examples from Cambridge
Advanced Learner’s Dictionary)
I think it’s an under-exploited area in the classroom. Beyond
an occasional activity on the following gerund/infinitive thing, I suspect colligation
issues mostly get picked up in feedback (when students have come up with an
awkward colligation in their writing) rather than being highlighted
proactively.
As with the other features, I’m not a fan of presenting
students with long lists of colligations, but raising awareness of the way that
particular words behave grammatically as they crop up is, I think, a key part
of helping students to notice patterns and to hopefully use vocabulary more
fluently and effectively.
* Hunston, S. (2001) Colligation, lexis, pattern, and
text
Labels: colligation, EAP, vocabulary
5 Comments:
Hi Julie
Useful post, thanks.
Yes, those negative constructions can be particularly tricky. I guess the following would be a colligation issue? I've just written some online practice at A2 level to supplement a course book that teaches:
I think + will
I don't think + will
and that 'I think + won't' is Wrong. Yet, editor for this component suggests having 'I think + won't' as an acceptable answer in the key...
What do you think or what don't you think? My head's addled!
Kathryn Aldridge-Morris
Hi Kathryn,
It is a tricky one. Unfortunately, a bit like collocation, there aren't hard-and-fast rules with colligation, more common tendencies.
Because 'I think' is one of those chunks we use in speech to introduce an opinion, we do sometimes end up using a negative after it (because we're making it up as we go along and don't bother to backtrack) - so a corpus search comes up with things like:
"I think we won't know for another two or three months yet."
"I think we won't see any new players."
But in each case, written down, these look a bit marked and you'd probably want to change both to "I don't think we'll ..."
As with lots of language, I guess at lower levels we inevitably end up presenting what's most common and natural as 'right' and things that sound marked or awkward as 'wrong'. I spend a lot of time trying to get through rubrics that say "Choose the best ..." instead of "Choose the correct ...", but it often gets vetoed on the grounds of simplicity.
Julie
I've learned something new today! Thanks Julie. I'm off to think up some more examples of colligation now.
Thanks for this interesting post, Julie. Have you also seen Hugh Dellar's webinar on the IATEFL website, on the topic of colligation? September 2015, I think ...
No, I'll look that one up, Lyn. Somehow Hugh & I seem to keep crossing over lately!
Julie
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