Contextual diversity favors the learning of new words in children regardless of their comprehension skills
Date
2022Author
Rosa, Eva
Salom, Rafael
Perea, Manuel
Metadata
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Eva Rosa, Rafael Salom, Manuel Perea, Contextual diversity favors the learning of new words in children regardless of their comprehension skills, Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, Volume 214, 2022, 105312, ISSN 0022-0965, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jecp.2021.105312
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
Journal of Experimental Child Psychology
Abstract
Recent research has shown the benefits of high contextual diversity,
defined as the number of different contexts in which a word
appears, when incidentally learning new words. These benefits
have been found both in laboratory settings and in ecological settings
such as the classroom during regular hours. To examine the
nature of this effect in young readers aged 11–13 years, we analyzed
whether these benefits are modulated by the individuals’
reading comprehension scores; that is, would better comprehenders
benefit the most from contextual diversity? The manipulation
of contextual diversity was done by inserting the novel words into
three different contexts/topics, or into only one of them, while
keeping constant their frequency of occurrence. Results showed
that words encountered in different contexts were learned more
effectively than those presented in the same context. More important,
the effect of contextual diversity was similar regardless of the
participants’ comprehension skills. We discuss the implications of
these findings for models of word learning and the practical applications
in curriculum design.