Contextualizing Vocabulary Teaching Practices in Benin EFL Classes
Abstract
Acquiring vocabulary in EFL classes has been a controversial issue for years. The research
endeavor explores contextualization regarding vocabulary teaching in Benin EFL classes.
The paper aims to assist EFL teachers in using the most adequate strategy of teaching
vocabulary in the classroom. The study involved public EFL students and teachers. The
participants, specifically EFL students were assigned as experimental and control groups. The
instruments used for this research were class observation, questionnaire, and interview. Data
were gathered in class through two different skills namely Listening, Reading, and a
vocabulary lesson. The experimental studied vocabulary by means of memorization, texts,
and without clues, while the control group was instructed through contextualization. The data
analyzed have shown a good impact on the acquisition of students’ vocabulary knowledge for
the control group than the experimental group. It is believed that the results from this study
can be resorted as a useful method in the English classes by Benin EFL teachers, lecturers,
researchers, and language instructors