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Focus on Vocabulary Development

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beginning with toddlers all the way through high school. ... Books and wide reading are essential. Instruction can make a difference. Blachowicz, 2005 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Focus on Vocabulary Development


1
Focus on VocabularyDevelopment
2
Overview of the Focus
  • Session 1
  • Research
  • Implications for Best Practice

3
What is Vocabulary?
  • Words we speak
  • Words we need to know
  • to understand what we hear
  • Words we need to know
  • to construct meaning when reading
  • Words we use in writing
  • Armbruster, et al., 2001

4
Research
Vocabulary knowledge is strongly related to
reading proficiency and school achievement.
5
Research
  • The problem
  • There are profound differences in vocabulary
    knowledge among learners from
  • different ability and socioeconomic groups
  • beginning with toddlers all the way through
    high school.
  • In fact, high-knowledge third graders had
    vocabularies equal to low-performing 12th
    graders.
  • Beck McKeown, 1991
  • Smith, 1941

6
Research Review
  • After 35 years of review, Marzano and colleagues
    concluded research quite specifically points to
    eleven school-, teacher-, and student-level
    factors that determine student achievement.
  • Among these factors is Academic Vocabulary
  • It is one of the strongest indicators of how
    well students will learn subject area content
    when they come to school.
  • Many students acquire vocabulary outside of
    school and come to the subject-area classes
    already knowing and using terms essential for
    understanding content.

  • Marzano Pickering, 2001

7
Research
  • Two types of students
  • Those from academically advantaged environments
  • Those from academically disadvantaged
    environments.
  • As time progresses, the gap in academic
    vocabulary knowledge grows even larger, as does
    the gap in academic achievement .

  • Marzano Pickering, 2004

8
How many words do you know?
  • 2,500 words
  • (typical 3rd grade
    student)
  • 19,000-200,000
  • (typical college
    student)

9
Do the math
  • To learn 175,000 words between
  • third grade and college,
  • a student would need to learn about
  • 17,500 words every year, or
  • 48 words every day, or
  • 115 words every school day
  • Kamil (Stanford), 2003

10
More
  • Low SES students use 1/3 to 1/2 the words of
    higher SES students
  • Hart Risely, 1995

11
Similarly
  • ELL students use 1/3 to 1/2 the words of an
    average educated persons active vocabulary
  • Nash, 1997

12
Research
  • Researchers have stated that
  • Vocabulary deficiencies are a primary cause of
    academic failure in grades 3-12.
  • Baumann Kameenui,1991
  • Stanovich, 1986
    Becker, 1977

13
Consider
  • It is a vocabulary deficit that contributes
  • to student failure in content classrooms
  • and in meeting content standards.

14
Five Research-based Facts
  • Vocabulary is essential to learning
  • Students bring a wide range of vocabulary to
    school
  • Oral language, talk and listening is critical
  • Books and wide reading are essential
  • Instruction can make a difference.
  • Blachowicz, 2005

15
Acquiring Vocabulary
  • Students learn the meanings of most words
    incidentally or indirectly (implicitly) through
    everyday experiences by
  • Engaging in oral language (conversing,
    interacting, hearing others, asking questions)
  • Reading others communication
  • Listening to adults read high level selections to
    them and discussing the selection
  • Reading extensively on their own

16
However
  • Some vocabulary needs to be taught intentionally
    (explicitly) by providing
  • Specific word/term instruction
  • Word-learning strategies

17
Vocabulary Instruction
  • Vocabulary is essential to comprehension because
    of its long-term impact upon powers of
    communication and concept development.
  • It requires on-going instruction
  • To increase student familiarity and understanding
    of word meanings
  • To expand student word recognition
  • To increase student comprehension of content

18
Vocabulary Instruction
  • Vocabulary instruction should be an integral part
    of ALL instruction
  • It may begin with the major concept or
  • big ideas of the content,
  • i.e. photosynthesis, area, income tax, story
    elements
  • Or, be the foundations of content information
  • i.e. chloroplasts, square unit, paycheck,
    plot

19
Vocabulary Instruction
  • The average student in middle grades
  • and beyond
  • must acquire approximately 3,000 new words
    each year to stay current with each successive
    grade level. Nagy
    Anderson, 1984

20
Kinds of Gains Expected
  • Depicts a student who is in the 50th percentile
    in terms of vocabulary with no direct vocabulary
    instruction
  • Depicts same student after specific content-area
    vocabulary instruction and their ability to
    comprehend subject matter taught in school
  • INCREASE OF 33
  • Stahl and Fairbanks, 1986

21
Vocabulary Instruction
  • Research since 1980 suggests that the following
    principles should guide vocabulary instruction
  • Find ways to actively engage students when
    learning new words and developing understanding
    of their meaning
  • Enable students to personalize word learning
  • Use multiple sources of information to teach
    words through repeated exposures
  • Immerse students and the classroom in words

22
Vocabulary Instruction
  • National Reading Panel report (2000) offers the
  • following implications for practice
  • Vocabulary should be taught directly and
    indirectly
  • Repetition and multiple exposures to vocabulary
    are important
  • Learning in rich contexts is valuable for
    vocabulary learning
  • Vocabulary tasks should be restructured when
    necessary
  • Vocabulary learning should entail active
    engagement in learning tasks

23
Student comprehension and memory is strengthened
when
  • Relate to the content/words by experiencing it,
    by imagining it, and by using other sensory
  • experiences or images such as sensing, or
  • experiencing its smell, taste, feel, or
    outcome
  • Represent it by brainstorming, identifying
    associations, comparing/contrasting, structured
    mapping , visual organizers, drawing, writing
    about the words or using them in conversations
  • Reason with words/concepts by developing their
    definitions, identifying cluster associations,
    classifying words, acting them out, using them in
    creative writing

24
Vocabulary Instruction should not be left to
chance
  • Vocabulary instruction that improves
    comprehension has the following characteristics
  • Multiple exposures to instructed words
  • Exposure to words in meaningful contexts
  • Rich or varied information about each word
  • The establishment of ties between instructed
    words
  • and students own experience and prior
    knowledge
  • An active role by students in the word-learning
    process
  • Nagy and Herman,
    1987 Beck, et al.,
  • 2002 Beck, et al.,
    1987

25
Vocabulary Instruction
  • Vocabulary development is the
  • responsibility of every teacher

26
A Six-Step Process for Teaching New Terms
.
By Marzano and Pickering
27
Activities For Engagement
28
Games for Multiple Exposures to Vocabulary
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