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Enriching Students

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Enriching Students Vocabulary and Word Choice By Mr. Gonzalez, M.Ed. Language Arts & Reading Teacher John I. Smith K-8 Center * – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Enriching Students


1
Enriching Students Vocabulary and Word Choice
  • By Mr. Gonzalez, M.Ed. Language Arts
  • Reading Teacher
  • John I. Smith K-8 Center

2
Think about it
  • Think about the vocabulary instruction taking
    place in each of your classrooms
  • Jot down a true description or list of
    instructional strategies and activities you do or
    you are aware somebody else is doing
  • Discuss it with a partner in your group
  • Ask yourself
  • What am I doing to teach vocabulary or
  • What strategies or materials am I using?

3
Goals of Vocabulary Instruction
  • To build interest in words turn students into
    word detectives
  • To connect words found in texts to students life
    experiences
  • To clarify and extend word meanings across
    multiple curriculum areas
  • To develop strategies for learning new words
  • To give students many opportunities to use and
    receive feedback on correct and incorrect word
    use

4
Guidelines for Effective VocabularyInstruction
  • ?Word knowledge is essential for reading
    comprehension.
  • ?Wide reading in a variety of text types is to be
    encouraged and supported by every teacher.
  • ?Use direct instruction to teach Tier 2 words.
  • ?Learning new concepts requires active
    involvement with the words rather than passive
    definition memorization.

5
Guidelines for Effective VocabularyInstruction
(Cont.)
  • ?Multiple exposures to a word is necessary to
    learn it well - conceptual, contextual
    definitional.
  • ?Writing definitions in isolation from
    dictionaries is not a recommended practice.
  • ?Relate new words to students prior knowledge
    and to other related words when possible.
  • ?Students need to develop the ability to learn
    new words from the multiple contexts of reading.
  • ?Students need to be taught the differences
    between denotational and connotational meaning of
    words.

6
Where do we locate sources for Word Study?
Dictionaries, textbooks and Vocabulary Programs.
  • ? Expressions (Idioms, jargon, slang, proverbs,
    slogans, quotations, clichés, catchphrases)
  • Figures of speech (similes, metaphors, tongue,
    twisters, euphemisms, hyperbole, double talk,
    irony, puns, oxymoron)
  • Word associations (Context clues, analogies,
    homographs, homophones, etc)
  • Word formation (prefix, suffix, compounds,
    abbreviations, acronyms, etc)
  • Word games (hangman, word puzzles, spelling bees)
  • Different Kinds of Dictionaries (Online,
    Thesaurus, Textbook Glossaries)

7
Rationale for Vocabulary Instruction
  • Good readers use their oral vocabulary to make
    sense of the words they see in print.
  • Readers must know what most of the words mean
    before they can understand what they are reading.
  • As students learn to read more advanced texts,
    they must learn the meaning of new words that are
    not part of their oral vocabulary.
  • Multiple encounters are required before a word is
    really known and becomes part of the students
    active vocabulary.

8
What We Know from Research
  • The scientific research on vocabulary
    instruction reveals that most vocabulary is
    learned indirectly and that some vocabulary must
    be taught directly.
  • (National
    Reading Panel, 2001)

9
Indirect Vocabulary Learning
  • Students learn vocabulary indirectly when they
    hear and see words used in many different
    contexts for example, through conversations
    with adults and teachers, through being read to,
    and through reading extensively on their own.

10
Direct Vocabulary Learning
  • Students learn vocabulary directly when they
    are explicitly taught both individual words and
    word-learning strategies. Direct vocabulary
    instruction aids and improves reading
    comprehension.
  • Every teacher should be an ambassador in the
    use and teaching of new words.

11
Four Stages of Word Knowledge
  • Stage 1 No knowledge never saw it before
  • (for example conundrum)
  • Stage 2 Vague familiarity Heard it, but
    doesnt know what it means (For example Blasé )
  • Stage 3 Recognizes it in context as having
    something to do with ____ (For example
    microprocessor)
  • Stage 4 Rich and flexible knows it well
  • (For example keyboard)

12
Did you Know?
  • High vocabulary people not only know more
    words, but they know more about the words they
    know and know how to use them in the right
    context and at the right time.

13
Again, Think About It
  • How do you select words for vocabulary
    instruction?
  • Do you have a plan?
  • Can you share with us what
  • you do that really works?
  • Do you conscientiously teach vocabulary to your
    students? Explain How?

14
Vocabulary Instruction
  • Choose interesting words with mileage
  • Create student-friendly explanations
  • Decontextualize the words provide other
    examples
  • Create follow-up activities that prompt children
    to interact with meanings
  • Create ways to maintain the words over time

15
What words should I teach?
  • Directly teach those words that are important for
    understanding a concept or the text (content
    areas, authentic literature, etc).
  • Teach words that students are likely to see again
    and again.
  • Provide some instruction for words that are
    particularly difficult for students.

16
Choosing Words to TeachThree Tiers
  • Tier One Most basic words rarely require
    instructional attention to their meanings in
    school (clock, baby, happy, walk). It is not
    necessary to spend a lot of time teaching them
    because they are easier to learn than the other
    two tiers.
  • Except if you are teaching English Language
    Learners (ELLs).

17
Three Tiers
  • Tier Two High frequency words that are found
    across a variety of domains instruction toward
    tier two words is most productive (For example
    convoluted, lethargic, fluctuate, capitulate,
    negligible, capricious, benevolent, candid,
    pompous, pragmatic, fortuitous, sporadic,
    accolade, utopia). They are used in a variety of
    ways by mature language users. They should be the
    Main focus.

18
Three Tiers
  • Tier 3 words are the words whose frequency is
    quite low and limited to very specific domains,
    probably best learned when needed in content
    area. For example lathe, peninsula, refiner.
    These are important words, but need to be taught
    within the context and subject area where they
    will be used.

19
Identifying Tier Two Words
  • Importance and utility Words that are used by
    more mature language users and are frequently
    found in a variety of texts.
  • Academic language.
  • Instructional potential Words that can be used
    in a variety of ways so that students can build
    deep understandings and representations of them
    and make connections to other words and concepts.
  • Conceptual understanding Words that deepen a
    students understanding of a general concept by
    providing precise and specific words for
    describing that concept.

20
Specific Activities to Teach Vocabulary
  • ? Select only key words from the story and teach
    them
  • ? Relate new vocabulary to the students
    background knowledge and real-life experience.
  • Have students predict what each word means by
    using context clues
  • Teach context clues
  • ? Stop and clarify new words whenever they come
    up in the lesson

21
Specific Activities (Cont.)
  • Use words in meaningful contexts, applying them
    immediately after they have learned the meaning.
    Students need to have many encounters with the
    word and use it in different situations.
  • Use pictures to brainstorm words about a specific
    topic.
  • Give students book assignments to learn and use
    key terms in every content area subject.
  • (Social studies, science and math)

22
Specific Activities (Cont.)
  • ?Draw a picture to illustrate the meaning
  • ?Keep a vocabulary journal or notebook for new
    words and vocabulary activities
  • ?Build a word graveyard (Bury the Word Activity)
  • ?Do an activity called Show, Dont Tell
  • ?Do exercises to analyze word parts and parts of
    speech.
  • ?Teach students how to use and learn from
    dictionaries.
  • www.yourdictionary.com

23
Specific Activities (Cont.)
  • Do an Activity called Words of the Week
    (Use Board Space or Word Walls)
  • Do exercises that target definitions, Matching
    the Meaning, Finding Synonyms and Antonyms,
    Completing the Sentence, Word Associations,
    Meaning Selections, Vocabulary in Context,
    Analogies, Word Families, Word Games.
  • ?Use Graphic Organizers (Semantic map, Word Map,
    Word Sort, etc)

24
Questions
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