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Measuring Teenage Learners’ Automatized, Explicit, and/or Implicit Knowledge: A Question of Context?

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Abstract

The present study administered six test instruments to 13- to 14-year-old learners of English in Austria and Sweden (N = 213), countries offering settings with more explicit and implicit learning environments, respectively. Confirmatory Factor Analyses for Austria yielded a factor comprising timed grammaticality judgment tests, an oral narrative test, and elicited imitation, labelled in this study Automatized and/or Implicit Knowledge, and a factor including an untimed grammaticality judgment test and a metalinguistic knowledge test, named in this study Explicit Knowledge. In the Swedish context, goodness-of-fit indices provided some evidence that a single-factor model shows a better fit, although a comparison of this model with two-factor models did not reach statistical significance. The findings point to the potential importance of considering the specificities of a learning environment in interpreting learner achievement on measures of the implicit versus explicit knowledge spectrum.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)506-541
Number of pages36
JournalLanguage Learning
Volume74
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2024

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 602008 English studies

Keywords

  • automatized knowledge
  • explicit knowledge
  • implicit knowledge
  • learning environment

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