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Letters:
Saturday, Nov 15, 2003,Page 8
Pleasure boosts English
In order to improve Taiwanese students' English competence,
specifically performance on the TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign
Language), experts have recommended that English education be
extended to all four years of college and that teacher quality be
improved ("Students' English disappoints," Nov. 7, page 2).
Research shows that the best predictor of scores on the TOEFL is
the amount of recreational reading students do, using material that
students select themselves and read for their own pleasure. Other
studies come to very similar conclusions: Students in classes that
emphasize pleasure-reading acquire more grammar and vocabulary than
students in
traditional classes.
These studies have been done in several different countries, and
include important work from Taiwan. Professor Sy-ying Lee of
National Taipei University has shown that the amount of
pleasure-reading done was a significant predictor of how well
students performed in a writing test. Of great interest is the
finding that the amount of formal study and the amount of writing
did not
predict writing proficiency.
We know from linguistics research that the grammatical system of
any language is far too complex to be taught and learned. Linguists
admit that they have not yet succeeded in accurately describing all
the rules of any language. In addition, academic English requires a
vocabulary of between 50,000 and 150,000 words, which is far too
many to memorize one at a time.
Reading material that interests students allows them to absorb
the complex writing style of English, gradually acquire the huge
vocabulary they need, as well as complex grammatical rules.
Before prescribing "more of the same," we might consider taking
advantage of this easier, more pleasant path.
Stephen Krashen
Professor Emeritus University of Southern
California
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