@article{0886ec700d21431aa28bfaada7b04119,
title = "Formulaic sequences and EAP writing development: Lexical bundles in the TOEFL iBT writing section",
abstract = "Formulaic sequences are widely used in academic writing and are known to be an important aspect of EAP writing development. However, little research has investigated the frequency, function and degree of fixedness of their use by ESL writers across proficiency levels. This study examines the use of lexical bundles in written responses across three proficiency levels in the TOEFL iBT (. N=480). Bundles that were identical to those found in the prompts were analyzed separately. Biber, Conrad, and Cortes' (2004) taxonomy was used to identify bundle functions. Following Biber (2009), the degree of fixedness for each of the four slots in the bundle was investigated in relation to the other three. The results indicate that lower level learners used more bundles overall but also more bundles identical to those in the prompts. In contrast, the functional analysis reveals a similar use of stance and discourse organizing bundles across proficiency levels and very few referential bundles used by any of the groups. In addition, there were few differences in fixed versus variable slot bundles across proficiency levels. These findings have important implications for instruction and assessment of EAP writing.",
keywords = "Academic writing development, Corpus linguistics, EAP, Learner writing, Lexical bundles, TOEFL iBT",
author = "Shelley Staples and Jesse Egbert and Douglas Biber and Alyson McClair",
note = "Funding Information: This project was funded by the TOEFL Committee of Examiners and the TOEFL program at Educational Testing Service. This study is part of a larger project, the details of which are reported in Biber and Gray (2013) . The larger project involved a comprehensive lexico-grammatical description of the TOEFL iBT responses, both spoken and written, and across different score levels and task types. The results showed systematic variation in the use of lexical bundles across score levels, so a more detailed analysis of the bundle characteristics was undertaken for the current study. Along with additional investigations into the frequency and function of lexical bundles used, this study adds an analysis of the degree of fixedness found for the bundles used by test takers, since this is an important feature of lexical bundles used in academic writing. Another important addition is the analysis of frequency data from each individual test taker, instead of analyzing the group as a whole. This approach is relatively rare in studies investigating lexical bundle use and importantly allows for the use of inferential statistics. 5 Funding Information: This project was supported by Educational Testing Service. We thank Bethany Gray for her feedback during the analysis stage and William Crawford for suggestions on earlier drafts of this paper. We would also like to thank the anonymous reviewers for their helpful and insightful comments and suggestions. ",
year = "2013",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1016/j.jeap.2013.05.002",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "12",
pages = "214--225",
journal = "Journal of English for Academic Purposes",
issn = "1475-1585",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
number = "3",
}