Title: Effective Vocabulary Instruction
1Effective Vocabulary Instruction
2Introductions
- Robert Kohser
- Teachers are Role Models, not Scapegoats
- Exercise. Eat an apple every day.
- Display a Positive Attitude (NOT fake)
- Have a Hobby
- Dress Well
- Smile (perhaps not at first ?)
- Say hello their name
3Meet Your Classmates
- Name
- Graduated from
- What do you teach and where?
- What you like most about education.
4Expected Outcomes
- 1. Unfamiliar vocabulary interferes with
comprehension. - 2. Explicit vocabulary instruction is important.
- 3. Select prime words for instruction.
- 4. Learn about concept instruction in the content
areas. - 5. Dictionary definitions are limiting in
teaching concepts. - 6. Identify instructional tools for teaching
concepts. - 7. Use student interest and prior knowledgeÂ
- 8. Incorporate activities that reinforce
vocabulary through repetition while maintaining
student interest. - 9. Help students understand different types of
context clues - 10. Use morphology to aid comprehension
(prefixes, suffixes and root words)
5My Expected Outcomes
- Understand more about government imposed hoops
and how you your students must jump through
them. - Learn how to accept the hoops and incorporate
them into your existing, intellectually
stimulating curriculum. - Learn how to prevent our students from becoming
standardized citizens still pass the
standardized tests.
6Section IFramework for Vocabulary Development
- Examine how unfamiliar vocabulary interferes with
comprehension. - Â
- Review research highlighting the importance of
explicit vocabulary instruction.
7The limits of my language mean the limits of my
world.Ludwig Wittgenstein, 1889-1951,
Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus (1922)
8How does vocabulary affectreading comprehension?
- Read the passage that begins with Acoustically,
the syllable is an unanalyzable spoken unit.
9Making Connections Activity
What makes this text challenging to
comprehend? What independent word learning
strategies did you use to help you make sense of
the passage? List the words that made
comprehending this text difficult. How does this
experience relate to the Conceptual
Framework? Discuss the importance of background
knowledge and vocabulary in comprehension.
10Â What does the research say?
- Read aloud the research on PP 6
11The Vocabulary Gap
- Children who enter with limited vocabulary
knowledge grow more discrepant over time from
their peers who have rich vocabulary knowledge. - The number of words students learn varies
greatly. - 2 vs. 8 words per day
- 750 vs. 3000 per year
12Between grades1 and 3
- Economically disadvantaged students vocabularies
increase by about 3,500 words a year - Middle-class students vocabularies increase by
about 5,000 words a year.
13Language acquisition in school
- Printed school English
- 500,000 graphically distinct word types
- Half of 500,000 words occur once or less in a
billion words of text.
14- Childrens vocabulary size approximately doubles
between grades 3 and 7. - Massive vocabulary growth appears to occur
without much help from teachers.
15(No Transcript)
16Think About It
- Take an 8 minute break
- Ask one person a goal they plan to reach during
this lifetime - Be able to tell us their name goal after the
break
17Reaching GoalsVSEnjoying the Process
- Are schools more focused on reaching goals or
enjoying the process of learning? - Be sure to incorporate a focus on intellectually
stimulating material into your FCAT preparation. - Getting there is half the fun.
- Do we think this way?
18Road Rage Statistics
- 72.84 of drivers tailgate another driver to
encourage them to speed up go faster. - 80.50 use obscene gestures with other drivers.
- 72.67 feel angry when another motorist does
something stupid. - Stats taken from an 11,000 person survey on
roadragers.com.
19Selecting Words for ExplicitVocabulary
Instruction
- Participants will
- Know when and how to select vocabulary for
explicit instruction.
20- The goal for vocabulary development is to ensure
that students are able to apply their own
knowledge of words to appropriate situations and
are able to increase their knowledge through
independent encounters with words . . .
Research . . . indicates that the best way to
reach this goal is to help students add to their
repertoires both specific words and skills that
promote independent learning of words, and also
to provide opportunities from which words can be
learned. Beck and McKeown, 1991
21Tier One Words
- Most basic words
- Clock, baby, happy
- Rarely require instruction in school
22Tier Two Words
- High-frequency words for mature language users
- Likely to appear frequently in a wide variety of
texts and in the written and oral language of
mature language users - One test Do students have ways to express the
concepts? - New words offer students more precise ways of
referring to ideas they already know about
23Tier Twonot simple synonyms
- More precise or more complex forms of the
familiar words
24Criteria for Identifying Tier Two Words
- Importance and utility
- Instructional potential
- Conceptual understanding
25 Tier Three Words
- Frequency of use is quite low
- Best learned when needed in a content area
- Necessary to understand a selection
26A Process For Selecting Words To Teach
- Determine what you want your students to learn
- Identify the general words that lend themselves
to various word-learning strategies and are high
frequency (Tier Two) - Identify key terms that are related to the units
theme (Tier Three) - Decide on appropriate strategies to introduce and
reinforce the words.
27Instructional InterventionContinued
- Make School Relevant
- Career-Based Everything
- Banking
- Automotive
- Real Estate
- Web Publishing
- Read Up-to-date literature
- Cleverly incorporate the classics
- Sex Sells STILL
- Have things changed all that much?
- Technology
- PDAs, Smartboards, Cell Phones
- Internet Access Everywhere
- Students MUST assume responsibility for their
actions
28Teaching Concepts
- Participants will
- Learn the importance of concept instruction
- Consider the limitations of dictionary
definitions - Identify instructional tools for teaching concepts
29Teaching Words as Concepts
- Learning words as concepts means
- learning to conceive and express new ideas
- acquiring a sophisticated schema that facilitates
meaningful interpretation in a variety of contexts
30Treat a word as a concept ?
- Is knowledge of the concept necessary for
understanding the text or is it only incidental?
- Are there words that could be grouped together to
enhance understanding a concept? - What strategies could be employed to help
students integrate the concept (and related
words) into their lives? - How much prior knowledge will students have about
this concept and its related words? - Is the concept significant and does it therefore
require pre-teaching?
31Select vocabulary to understand a specific text
- Select content specific vocabulary for explicit
pre-teaching - Select vocabulary necessary for student
comprehension
32Dictionary Definitions
- When students looked up a dictionary definition
and used the word in a sentence - 63 of the students sentences were judged to be
odd (Miller Gildea, 1985) - 60 of students responses were unacceptable
(McKeown, 1991, 1993) - Students frequently interpreted one or two words
from a definition as the entire meaning (Scott
Nagy, 1989)
33- Definitions, as an instructional device have
substantial weaknesses and limitations.
Definitions do not teach you how to use a new
word and do not effectively convey concepts.
Think of it this way Why isnt a glossary of
biological terms an adequate substitute for a
biology textbook? (Nagy, 1989) - thus knowing a word cannot be identified with
knowing a definition
(Nagy Scott, 2000)
34Concept Map
Category What is it?
Properties What is it like?
Quadrilateral
Comparisons What is something similar?
All four sides are congruent
rectangle
Square
All four angles are congruent and right (90
degrees)
Diagonals are congruent, bisect each other, and
are perpendicular
Computer disk
Different colors on a chess board
Illustrations What are some examples?
35Helping students understand difference in degrees
of meaning
- Linear Arrays help students understand
relationships between words that differ in
degrees of meaning. - Begin by showing students the relationship
between words.
36Vocabulary Poster
- Word
- Definition
- Sentence or twofrom the text
- Graphic
37parlor Definition formal living room Anne
Hathaways home was a three-bedroom house with a
small parlor . . .
38Explicit Vocabulary InstructionPromoting
Integration, Repetition, Meaningful Use
- Participants will
- Learn how to use student interest and prior
knowledge to expand and refine vocabulary. - Know how to incorporate activities that reinforce
vocabulary through repetition while maintaining
student interest.
39Word Sorts
- Closed sort
- students know the categories in advance
- Open sort
- students determine the categories
40Interactive Word Walls
corpse
cadaver
graveyard shift
wake
41Explicit Vocabulary InstructionIndependent Word
Learning Strategies (Section V)
- Know how to help students understand different
types of context clues and how authors use these
context clues to assist readers. - Know how to use morphology (prefixes, suffixes
and root words) to help students develop their
vocabulary.
42Context Clues
- Context clues can help you figure out the meaning
of words and phrases. Six types of context clues
are - Definition
- Restatement
- Examples
- Contrast And Comparison
- Synonym/antonyms
- Familiar language experience
- Association
- Reflection of Mood
43The Matrixcorrelates withFahrenheit 451
- Instructional InterventionContinued
44Morphology Use prefixes, suffixes and root
words to help students develop their vocabulary
45DISSECT
- Step 1 Discover the context
- Step 2 Isolate the prefix
- Step 3 Separate the suffix
- Step 4 Say the stem (if you cannot, go to steps
5, 6,7) - Step 5 Examine the stem (Rules of 2s and 3s)
- Step 6 Check with someone
- Step 7 Try the dictionary
46Independent word learning strategies include
- Learning how to use context clues
- Knowing how to use morphemes
- Knowing how to use dictionaries effectively
- Knowing how to personalize word learning
47Using Dictionaries Effectively
- Use the dictionary after reading a word in
context, rather than before - Understand how dictionary definitions are
designed - Try some nontraditional dictionaries
48Personalizing Word Learning Keyword Method
- Define the unfamiliar word.
- Select a keyword for the unfamiliar word. Link
keyword with unfamiliar word. - Recall the meaning.
49Other Methods for Personalizing Word Learning
- mnemonics
- graphics
- visualization
- dramatization
50What is Effective Vocabulary Instruction?
- Dont
- Use word lists
- Rely only on the dictionary
- Rely too much on context for definitions
- Use words out of context
- Do
- Connect words to prior knowledge
- Use words in context
- Connect words to concept development
- Read to students
- Encourage silent reading
51Vocabulary Log
- A four-column journal in which you record the
challenging new word, the sentence in which you
found the word, the dictionary definition, and a
picture.
52Vocabulary Log Journal
53(No Transcript)
54Planning vocabulary instruction
- Choose impact vocabulary
- Determine level of instruction
- Decide on intensive instruction
- Integrate
- Repeat
- Use in meaningful ways
- Study word families and roots
55Selecting words for explicit, intensive
instruction
- Choose Tier Two Wordswords that are important
because of their general utility in the language - Choose words that are important to understanding
the lesson - Choose conceptually difficult words
- Choose groups of words with related meanings