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Teaching Vocabulary Secondary Literacy 5

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In 1995, Hart & Risley studied vocabulary development of high SEC ... Supercilious, banal, cravat. How to choose words to teach? Brick Words. Key content words ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching Vocabulary Secondary Literacy 5


1
Teaching VocabularySecondary Literacy 5
  • Philippe Ernewein
  • Literacy Specialist
  • www.rememberit.org

2
Journal
  • In 1995, Hart Risley studied vocabulary
    development of high SEC and low SES children over
    time. They did intense observations of children
    of professors at the University of Kansas and
    children of the Turner House, a pre-school
    located in the impoverished Juniper Gardens area
    of Kansas City.

3
Journal
  • The following graph shows the general trend they
    found.
  • What are the implications of it for you?
  • What responses does it raise for you?
  • Turn to your journals now.

4
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5
Betty Hart and Todd R. RisleyCorps Members in
Spirit
  • 1960s War on Poverty
  • Optimistic effort to intervene early to
    forestalleffects that poverty was having on some
    childrens academic growth.
  • Unique aspect of their approach
  • 30 million word gap by age 3
  • Achievement gap is a word gap

6
What Did You Write?
7
What are we learning?
  • Three principles of effective vocabulary
    instruction
  • Choose appropriate words to teach
  • Application of vocabulary games to add to lesson
    plans/evaluation

8
Why are we learning this?
  • Effective vocabulary instruction is essential
  • Given the word gap and high vocabulary demands of
    secondary text, this instruction is critical

9
Agenda
  • DO NOW
  • Introduction
  • Review
  • New Material
  • Word Activity Competition
  • Teaching Tool
  • Close/Journals

10
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11
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12
How to choose words to teach?
  • Brick Words
  • Key content words
  • Mortar Words
  • Connecting words multi-use academic verbs
  • Capstone Words
  • Big academic concepts built upon brick words
  • Window Dressing Words
  • Rare exotic words with low-utility

13
How to choose words to teach?
  • Brick Words
  • Key content words
  • Observations, data, hypothesis

14
How to choose words to teach?
  • Mortar Words
  • Connecting words multi-use academic verbs
  • However, Analyze, Compare

15
How to choose words to teach?
  • Capstone Words
  • Big academic concepts built upon brick words
  • Experiment, Scientific Method

16
How to choose words to teach?
  • Window dressing words
  • Rare exotic words with low-utility
  • Supercilious, banal, cravat

17
How to choose words to teach?
  • Brick Words
  • Key content words
  • Mortar Words
  • Connecting words multi-use academic verbs
  • Capstone Words
  • Big academic concepts built upon brick words
  • Window Dressing Words
  • Rare exotic words with low-utility

18
Three Tiers Approach
19
General rule of thumb (part 1)
  • English teachers should focus on tier two words,
    perhaps the most critical for our students to
    master in order to have a broadly applicable
    vocabulary and enhanced reading and writing
    ability.

20
General rule of thumb (part 2)
  • Content area teachers should teach tier two
    words when necessary and appropriate, but are
    primarily responsible for teaching tier three
    words, as those are most likely crucial to the
    understanding of the major concepts of the
    content area.

21
Guiding questions
  • Which words are most important understanding the
    text we are going to read and/or the concepts we
    are about to study?
  • Which words do students already have prior
    knowledge of?
  • Which words can be figured out from the context?

22
The 1920s A Time of Transformation
  • HS social studies text on page XXXX
  • Our job
  • Not just identify rare words that students do not
    know
  • But prioritize which words are most important to
    teach students to meet objectives empower them
    to read academic texts
  • Words they cannot do without

23
The Bottom Line
  • Students will encounter unfamiliar words
  • Focus key words
  • Bricks, mortar and then capstone words
  • Build meaning, avoid window dressing word
  • Tier 2, English, Tier 3 content teachers
  • Check for vocabulary understanding constantly and
    informally

24
Collabs selecting words
  • Select 3 words (using one of the selection
    systems)
  • Your job (hand-out on page XXXX)
  • Each collab will participate in a Word Activity.
  • Apply any Word Activity to the 3 words you
    selected in your collab.
  • 3 minutes to practice/3 minutes to share at
    tables tables select best example and share out
    to all-group to compete for best Word Activity
    application.

25
Playing With Vocabulary WordsDefinitions on page
XXXX
  • Oral Stories
  • Quick Skits
  • Drawing
  • Categories
  • Journal Topics
  • Sell It
  • Dialogue
  • Newspaper Caption
  • Write a Poem

26
All-Group Share Out
  • Please identify the following prior to sharing
    your best work
  • Bricks, mortar, capstone or tier
  • Content specific vocabulary
  • Name of Word Activity

27
How do I teach them?
  • Use Frayer Model to learn about concept of
    effective vocabulary instruction

28
Frayer Model Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Definition
  • Well-planned and purposeful instruction that
    provides students with deep understanding of key
    words

29
Frayer Model Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Key Characteristics
  • Teaching a small number of words providing
    student-friendly definitions.
  • Creating meaningful interactions with words that
    lead to deep processing.
  • Providing multiple exposures in a variety of
    contexts

30
Frayer Model Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Example
  • -On Monday, teacher gives definitions for five
    bricks mortar words from a chapter, models,
    gives example sentences, then involves students
    in Think-Pair-Share using meaningful sentences.
  • -On Tuesday, students read the text, clarifying
    meanings as they go.
  • -On Wednesday, students use these words in a
    writing activity to respond to the text.

31
Frayer Model Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • Non-Example
  • On Tuesday, teacher interrupts reading to have
    students copy 15 words and their definitions from
    glossary.
  • After that, they complete a worksheet filing in
    the blanks for 15 unrelated sentences.
  • On Friday, they take a spelling test on the words.

32
Frayer Model multiple uses
33
Weekly Vocabulary Cycle
  • Sunday
  • Preview text and select vocabulary words.
  • Plan for weeks vocabulary instruction.
  • Monday
  • Introduce new vocabulary words
  • ? by using Warm Up
  • Provide definitions in Mini-lesson
  • ? by using Frayer Model
  • Tuesday
  • Post words on word wall
  • 2 minute review words at start or end of lesson

34
Weekly Vocabulary Cycle
  • Wednesday
  • Incorporate vocabulary words in exit slip to
    review
  • Students make flash cards for words as part of
    homework problems
  • Thursday
  • Review game for last 20 minutes of class
  • ? Jeopardy, Bingo, Memory Game, etc.
  • Friday
  • Assessment

35
Warm-up/DO NOW Example
  • Using your background knowledge, match up each
    term with a definition. Be ready to provide a
    justification for your choices.
  • Equation A. All the possible
    inputs in a formula
  • Domain B. The degree to which
    a line rises
  • Coefficients C. A formula
    balanced on both sides
  • Steep D. A number
    used to multiply a variable
  • Axis E. The 2 main lines on a
    coordinate plane

36
Exit Slip
  • Where is the point of origin for the x and y
    axis?
  • -5, -2, 0, 1, 5 What is the domain of this set
    of data?
  • y x 2. Solve when x 5.
  • Place each of your 5 vocabulary words in a
    thought bubble. Organize the order of the words
    in any way that makes sense to you, but be sure
    to include a 3 sentence rationale for
    placement/categories of the words.

37
Jeopardy review game
38
The Big Three
  • Focus on small number of words that were
    essential to content objectives
  • Opportunity for students to actively work with
    the words meanings by providing examples,
    testing partners creating visual
  • Context for the words, sometimes just discussing
    the word, then reading it, or many contexts as in
    the math example

39
Workshop your choice
  • Analyze vocabulary
  • lesson plan
  • How does teaching the selected words help further
    the objective?
  • Is the lesson engaging? Meaningful?
  • What could you do to improve it?
  • What would be needed to reinforce the learning of
    these words?
  • Page XXX lesson samples
  • Using a text you are going
  • to teach, select 5 key
  • academic words of
  • different types.
  • Bricks, mortar, capstone or tier level.
  • Essential to understanding text.
  • Serve the purpose for reading text.
  • Page XXX output

40
What did we learn?
41
Key Characteristics
  • Teaching a small number of words providing
    student-friendly definitions.
  • Creating meaningful interactions with words that
    lead to deep processing.
  • Providing multiple exposures in a variety of
    contexts.

42
Our bigger purpose
  • To close the achievement gap, we must address the
    vocabulary gap.

43
Check-out
  • Homework?
  • www.rememberit.org
  • Journals to mailbox
  • Names returned
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