8 Lexical richness and the oral pro®ciency of Chinese EFL students A comparison of different measures Helmut Daller and Huijuan Xue Introduction The aim of this chapter is to develop Nation's ®nal concern discussed in the opening chapter of this book: that of the importance of testing vocabulary in use. We have a variety of lexical measures available to us and the differences between them suggest that they may be useful in different ways and in different circumstances. It is not always clear which measure is most useful in any given set of circumstances. Indeed, as Fitzpatrick's Chapter 6 (in this volume) has made clear, we often lack basic information on the use of these tests from which to draw a conclusion. In this chapter, therefore, we intend to investigate which measurement of lexical richness appears the most suitable for measuring oral pro®ciency of Chinese EFL learners. This is a speci®c task and one where the vocabulary knowledge that a learner can bring to bear should play an important role in their success in carrying out the task. It might be expected that some measures would be more suitable than others. What, then are the measures available which might prove suitable? A person's language pro®ciency is closely related to the size and depth of their vocabulary, and this is true of both ®rst and foreign languages. The lexical richness displayed in an oral or written text is a result of this underlying vocabulary knowledge. The term lexical richness covers several aspects of vocabulary use (see Read, 2000: 200ff.) such as lexical diversity, which is `the variety of active vocabulary deployed by a speaker or writer' (Malvern and Richards, 2002: 87). Other aspects of lexical richness are lexical sophistication (the number of low frequency words) or lexical density (the ratio of content and function words used). Most researchers would agree that vocabulary knowledge and thus lexical richness play an important role in language pro®ciency. There are, however, many methodo- 150