A test of controlled productive knowledge of English academic vocabulary
Journal article, 2025

Within the field of language education, language assessment is an important concern, for both pedagogical and research purposes. Vocabulary is a key aspect of language proficiency, underpinning the four skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening. In academic contexts, of particular importance is academic vocabulary, the part of the lexicon which is better represented in academic than in general discourse, and which constitutes a key dimension of students’ academic literacy. The present paper details the design and initial validation of a new test of controlled productive knowledge of English academic vocabulary. The test design closely follows that of the Productive Vocabulary Levels Test (Laufer & Nation, 1999) but the new instrument – named the Productive Academic Vocabulary Test – uses a different basis for defining academic vocabulary and employs an updated set of scoring principles. The test was validated using scores from 232 participants at three Swedish universities. Findings indicate that the test can discriminate levels of knowledge of English academic vocabulary amongst the target population and that the scoring principles provide a nuanced measure of vocabulary knowledge. Pedagogical and research implications are discussed.

English for academic purposes (EAP)

language education

academic vocabulary

Productive Academic Vocabulary Test (PAVT)

vocabulary testing

Author

Diane Pecorari

University of Leeds

Hans Malmström

Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Language and Communication

Marcus Warnby

University of Gothenburg

Acta Didactica Norden

2535-8219 (ISSN)

Vol. 19 1 1-32 11

Does English-medium instruction develop professional English literacy? A longitudinal investigation of master's programmes

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2013-2373), 2014-01-01 -- 2017-12-31.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Educational Sciences

Pedagogy

Studies of Specific Languages

Didactics

Learning and teaching

Pedagogical work

DOI

10.5617/adno.11584

More information

Latest update

5/20/2025