Title: Academic Vocabulary and Background Knowledge
1Academic Vocabulary and Background Knowledge
2- Academic Vocabulary
- versus
- Everyday Vocabulary
3Gaps
- Differences in vocabulary development
- 3-year olds from families on welfare have about
70 of the vocabulary of children from working
class families and 45 of the vocabulary of
children from professional families. - These differences will get even greater as the
children grow older. - Marzano, R. J. (2004). Building background
knowledge for academic achievement Research on
what works in schools. ASCD Alexandria, VA.
4- Mobility and poverty impact student achievement
- What do we have control or influence over that
can impact student achievement?
5- If you wanted to teach all of the standards in
the national documents, you would have to change
schooling from K-12 to K-22. - 255 standards across 14 subject areas
- 3,500 benchmarks
6- 13,000 hours of class time available
- 9,000 hours of instruction available
- 15,500 hours of instruction needed to cover the
3,500 benchmarks - Marzano, R. School leadership that works in
schools. OCPS Principals Institute. - June 8, 2006.
7- CAAP
- Comprehensive Academic Achievement Plan
- (Standards, Benchmarks,
- Task Analyses)
8OCPS Vocabulary Lists
- Sunshine State Standards
- Benchmarks
- Task Analyses
- FCAT
9Break-out Groups
- Group 1 Building Academic Vocabulary initial
training complete program begun - Group 2 Some presentation given need further
planning - Group 3 In planning stage
10Vocabulary Lesson?
slope carve powder mogul face-plant
11Definitions
- slope
- 1 ground that forms a natural or artificial
incline2 upward or downward slant or
inclination or degree of slant3 the part of a
continent draining to a particular ocean
ltAlaska's North Slopegt4 a the tangent of the
angle made by a straight line with the x-axis b
the slope of the line tangent to a plane curve at
a point
12Definitions
- carve
- 1 to cut with care or precision ltcarved
fretworkgt2 to make or get by or as if by
cutting -- often used with out ltcarve out a
careergt3 to cut into pieces or slices ltcarved
the turkeygtintransitive verb1 to cut up and
serve meat2 to work as a sculptor or engraver
13Definitions
- powder
- 1 to sprinkle or cover with or as if with
powder2 to reduce or convert to powder3 to
hit very hardintransitive verb1 to become
powder2 to apply cosmetic powder
14Definitions
- mogul
- 1 also moghul or mughal /'mü-/ capitalized
an Indian Muslim of or descended from one of
several conquering groups of Mongol, Turkish, and
Persian origin2 Etymology German dialect akin
to German dialect (Viennese) mugl small hill a
bump in a ski run
15Definitions
- face-plant
- 1 a sudden face-first fall
16Building Background Knowledge
- Why direct vocabulary instruction of academic
terms? - Estimates of the impact of reading on vocabulary
development do not take into account the research
indicating how difficult it is for students to
learn words through context alone. - Marzano, R. J. (2004). Building background
knowledge for academic achievement Research on
what works in schools. ASCD Alexandria, VA.
17Strong Predictor ofAcademic Progress
- Researchsupports what students already know
about the content is one of the strongest
indicators of how well they will learn new
information relative to the content. - Marzano, R. J. (2004). Building background
knowledge for academic achievement Research on
what works in schools. ASCD Alexandria, VA.
18Focus on Academic Terms
19OCPS Vocabulary Lists
- Sunshine State Standards
- Benchmarks
- Task Analyses
- FCAT
20Impact of Direct Vocabulary Instruction
21Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
22Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Effective vocabulary instruction does not rely on
definitions. - therefore, Steps 1 and 2.
23Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Students must represent their knowledge of words
in linguistic and non-linguistic ways. - therefore, Step 3.
24Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Involves the gradual shaping of word meanings
through multiple exposures. - therefore, Step 4.
25Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Teaching word parts enhances students
understanding of terms. - also related to Step 4.
26Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- 5. Different types of words require different
types of instruction.
27Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Students should discuss the terms they are
learning. - therefore, Step 5.
28Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Students should play with words.
- therefore, Step 6.
29Eight Characteristicsof Effective Direct
Vocabulary Instruction
- Instruction should focus on terms that have a
high probability of enhancing academic success. - therefore, OCPS Vocabulary Lists!
30(No Transcript)
31- Reflection
- The vocabulary information recently presented is
common sense, but not necessarily common
practice. - How might you help your faculty make these eight
characteristics and six steps common practice?