How Big Is “Big”? Interpreting Effect Sizes in L2 Research
Northern Arizona University · Rice University
Abstract
The calculation and use of effect sizes—such as d for mean differences and r for correlations—has increased dramatically in second language (L2) research in the last decade. Interpretations of these effects, however, have been rare and, when present, have largely defaulted to Cohen's levels of small ( d = .2, r = .1), medium (.5, .3), and large (.8, .5), which were never intended as prescriptions but rather as a general guide. As Cohen himself and many others have argued, effect sizes are best understood when interpreted within a particular discipline or domain. This article seeks to promote more informed and field‐specific interpretations of d and r by presenting a description of L2 effects from 346 primary…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 127
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Psychology
- Field (mathematics)
- Cognitive psychology
- Linguistics
- Statistics
- Mathematics