Extending the reach of research
Establishing and sustaining a culture of accessible summaries of applied linguistics research
What is OASIS?
One page, non-technical summaries of studies published in journals
wide range (areas, theories, methods etc.)
searchable interface
accessed via wide range of international networks, e.g., professional associations
Launched by a short term project; driven forward and sustained by academic journals
sustainable, systematic, international, peer-reviewed research
Not creating “great expectations” (Lightbown, 1985).
summaries stick to one study (but includes summaries of syntheses)
they are summaries, not ‘applications & implications’
it’s one step – engagement among users needed
will not be able to make all research accessible to all audiences
What problem does it solve?
Research shows…
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
1) Epistemic responsibility:
There is a need to “defog the ‘ivory tower’ complex” (Watermeyer, 2012)
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
2) Research is inaccessible
“Prof, no one is reading you”.
“Academese [makes] the materials quite dry and abstract, and simply a bore to read.”
(Bitescience)
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
3) We cannot leave this to intermediaries:
not sustained or
of little relevance to language learning
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
4) Who decides what is disseminated?
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
5) Benefits of engaging with research for educators
Bai, 2018; Borg, 2010; Furlong et al., 2014; Stenhouse, 1975; Winch, Oancea &
Orchard, 2015
6) Benefits for engaging with practitioners for researchers
“Most definitely - engagement with others outside the academy (in my case, students of language, educators, and bilingual individuals) makes me think about research differently, helps me draw connections between different theories and data sources, and helps me keep the bigger picture in focus, even when I'm engaged in basic research (which is the bulk of my work).”
(from Tokowicz & Warren 2018)
“it helps us to think about whether our own teaching intuitions are backed up by research”
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
Access and understanding
Lack of professional development (46)
Lack of authority (43)
Terminology (33)
Unaware of resources (32)
Unaware of what is research-based practice (30)
Lack of “respect” for research
Different view of teaching / learning (24)
Not relevant (19)
Teaching experience is sufficient (18)
Lack of interest (17)
Time / funds / regulations
(2 components)
Lack of time (85)
Regulation/guidance at a local level (44)
No funds to attend conferences (59)
No funds to do research (57)
7) Many factors are barriers to accessing research
Principal Components Analysis
Marsden & Kasprowicz, 2017, The MLJ
Why is OASIS important: 8 motivations
8) We are told Accessible Summaries would be useful, to address some of those barriers
“How can research be made more accessible?”
The OASIS initiative aims to make findings from language related research available and accessible to anyone who might be interested through non-technical open summaries.
In this document, two prototype summaries are presented and annotated to help authors write summaries for OASIS.
Summary format
De Houwer, A., Bornstein, M. & Putnick, D. (2014). A bilingual–monolingual comparison of young children's vocabulary size: Evidence from comprehension and production. Applied Psycholinguistics 35 (6), 1189-1211. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0142716412000744
Who knows more words: bilingual or monolingual children?
Why this research is important
Many people are concerned about the language development of children growing up with two languages in the family. Such children have been thought to have a smaller vocabulary (fewer words) than monolingual children. This study investigated the development of vocabulary size – an important indicator of language development – by bilingual (Dutch and French) and monolingual children (Dutch only) at 13 and 20 months of age. Both comprehension (how many words children understand) and production (how many words they can say) was tested. While there were large differences in vocabulary size between individual children, the study found very few differences between the two groups of bilingual and monolingual children.
What the researchers did
What the researchers found
According to what the parents reported:
Things to consider
How to cite this summary: Andringa, S., Bailey, E., De Houwer, A., Marsden, E., Kasprowicz, R. (2018). Do bilingual or monolingual children have more vocabulary knowledge? OASIS Summary of De Houwer, Bornstein & Putnick (2014) in Applied Psycholinguistics. https://oasis-database.org
The current OASIS summary format, the writing guidelinesis, and the recommendations made in this document are based on:
Let’s have a look