Vocabulary learning appears to be a simple task; learners encounter words, repeat them over time, and recall them when needed. Yet a paradox persists: in the EFL context, vocabulary often proves difficult to retain for an upcoming test, and even harder to use in authentic contexts. Despite the promise of the spaced repetition method, forgetting remains common, and, as EFL students will concur, rote lists rarely translate into communicative competence. As a teacher and teacher trainer, this learning phenomenon has been a curiosity for me for over 30 years. During my younger years as a postgraduate researcher, I began tracing the roots of Mind, Brain, and Education science, drawing on Fischer’s Dynamic Skill Theory (Fischer, 2008) and the early integrative syntheses of neuroscience and pedagogy (Tokuhama-Espinosa, 2008). These works laid the foundation for later refinements in the field. As a retrospective monograph, this paper is a synthesis of over three decades of research bridging psychology, neuroscience, and pedagogical design to: (1) explain why vocabulary learning is harder than it first seems, (2) how it can be made easier and more meaningful for the students, and (3) how assessments can be improved. Drawing on frameworks such as the Dynamic Area of Total Convergence (DATC), NeuroELT maxims, and the 3D: CG rubric, this retrospective discusses a curated set of wide-ranging pedagogical integrations (diagnostic, dynamic, and convergent) for teacher training, vocabulary lesson design, and course design. These integrations treat vocabulary learning as a developmental coordination problem in which stability emerges only through repeated convergence across linguistic, sociocultural, and affective systems (Fischer Murphy, 2019).
Robert S. Murphy (Tue,) studied this question.
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