Adrian Buck’s Reviews > Implementing the Lexical Approach: Putting Theory into Practice > Status Update

Adrian Buck
is on page 160 of 176
"I see his point, and would only suggest a middle way: some formats, some 'chaos'..." Another methodology book that's recommendations are based on taste rather than efficacy.
— Feb 08, 2017 05:44AM
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Adrian’s Previous Updates

Adrian Buck
is finished
"Listening is therefore fundamentally better input than reading for mastering the grammatical system of the language...L1" - most grammar is a feature of literacy.
— Feb 20, 2017 09:31PM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"L1 and L2 learning...must be more similar than different." - Literacy?
— Feb 20, 2017 09:28PM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"Context, situation and global real world knowledge mean that a very small amount of aural information is sufficient for us to identify what must have been said" - variation in this between languages?
— Feb 20, 2017 09:26PM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"My position is not that language consists of prefabricated items, but that much more language than we have previously thought is stored and produced in this way."
— Feb 20, 2017 09:23PM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"The difference between two words of similar meaning is in some cases defined precisely by their different collocational profiles"
— Feb 20, 2017 09:20PM

Adrian Buck
is finished
Don't "worry about ship/sheep style pronunciation problems" - why not?
— Feb 20, 2017 08:39PM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"Learners tend to want to understand every word...[this] tends against maximally efficient acquisition." - again quantitative claim where's the quantitative evidence.
— Feb 20, 2017 03:17AM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"Learning a language involves a small element of factual knowledge, but consists largely of procedural knowledge..." - no, the opposite is true, if you consider that lexis is the factual content of a language.
— Feb 18, 2017 07:15AM

Adrian Buck
is finished
"We have already seen that learners acquire most efficiently by learning wholes which they later break into parts, for novel reassembly, rather than by learning parts and then facing a completely new task, building those parts into wholes." - well have?
— Feb 12, 2017 12:31AM