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Building Academic Vocabulary

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Title: Building Academic Vocabulary


1
Building Academic Vocabulary
Jen Madison jmadison_at_esu6.org See
http//manila.esu6.org/jmadison for the complete
PowerPoint presentation and other vocabulary
resources!
2
Guiding Questions
  • What is the effect of direct vocabulary
    instruction on student achievement?
  • What is one effective strategy for the direct
    instruction of vocabulary?

3
Why Vocabulary Instruction?
  • Background knowledge is a strong indicator of
    academic success.
  • Factors correlated to vocabulary
  • General measures of intelligence
  • Ones ability to comprehend new information
  • Level of income

4
Why Vocabulary Instruction?
  • Vocabulary knowledge is one of the best
    indicators of verbal ability (Sternberg, 1987
    Terman, 1916).
  • Teaching vocabulary can improve reading
    comprehension for both native English speakers
    (Beck, Perfetti, McKeown, 1982) and English
    learners (Carlo et al., 2004).
  • Disadvantages students are likely to have
    substantially smaller vocabularies than their
    more advantaged classmates (Templin, 1957 White,
    Graves, Slater, 1990).
  • Lack of vocabulary can be a crucial factor
    underlying the school failure of disadvantaged
    students (Becker, 1977 Biemiller, 1999).

(Graves, 2006)
5
Why Direct Instruction?
  • National Reading Panel. (2000). Report of the
    National Reading Panel Teaching Children to
    Read. Retrieved September 20, 2006, from
    http//www.nichd.nih.gov/publications/nrp/smallboo
    k.cfm
  • instruction does lead to gains in comprehension,
    but that methods must be appropriate to the age
    and ability of the reader
  • balance of indirect direct vocabulary
    instruction
  • importance of repetition multiple exposure to
    items
  • variety of direct instruction strategies

6
Why Vocabulary Instruction?
  • Marzano et. al. (2001.) Classroom Instruction
    That Works. Alexandria, VA McREL.
  • 12 percentile gain with any direct instruction
  • 33 percentile gain with systematic direct
    instruction of words in passage

7
Effect Sizes
Control Group
8
Guiding Questions
  • What is the effect of direct vocabulary
    instruction on student achievement?
  • What is one effective strategy for the direct
    instruction of vocabulary?

9
Personal Reflection
  • What are my criteria for choosing words?
  • If someone were to ask my students how they learn
    new words in my class, what would the students
    say?
  • How do I encourage vocabulary learning for the
    long term?

10
Different Kinds of Words Require Different Kinds
of Instruction!
  • Learning a basic oral vocabulary
  • Learning to read known words
  • Learning new words representing known concepts
  • Learning new words representing new concepts
  • Learning new meanings for known words
  • Clarifying and enriching the meanings of known
    words
  • Moving words into students expressive
    vocabularies
  • Building English learners vocabularies

(Graves, 2006)
11
Word Hierarchy
(Beck, McKeown, Kucan, 2002)
12
Some Criteria
  • (Beck, McKeown, Kucan, 2002, p.19)
  • Unknown words
  • Importance utility
  • Instructional Potential
  • Conceptual Understanding
  • (Graves, 2004, p. 68)
  • Unknown words
  • Importance of word to understanding selection
  • Use of context or structural analysis skills
  • Utility of word outside particular selection

13
Some Criteria (Marzano, 2001 Marzano,
2004)
  • Direct instruction on words that are critical to
    new content produces the most powerful learning
    (Marzano, 2001).
  • Powerful Choices
  • have a high probability of enhancing academic
    success
  • emphasized in reading
  • critical for understanding text or concept
  • Essential vs. supplemental
  • Limited Words

14
Limited Words (Marzano, 2001, p. 122)
15
Personal Reflection Forward Thinking
  • What are my criteria for choosing words?
  • If someone were to ask my students how they learn
    vocabulary in my class, what would the students
    say?
  • How do I encourage vocabulary learning for the
    long term?

16
What does the literature say?
  • Vocabulary instruction should focus on critical
    words
  • Effective vocabulary instruction does not rely on
    definitions.
  • Teaching word parts enhances understanding.
  • Different types of words require different types
    of instruction.
  • Active engagement improves learning.
  • Repeated exposure is essential.

17
One Proven Process
  • Marzano, R. (2004). Building background
    knowledge for academic achievement. Alexandria,
    VA ASCD.
  • Marzano, R. (2005). Building academic
    vocabulary Teachers manual. Alexandria, VA
    ASCD.

18
Characteristics of Effective Direct Vocabulary
Instruction
  • Effective vocabulary instruction does not rely on
    definitions.
  • Students must represent their knowledge of words
    in linguistic and nonlinguistic ways.
  • Effective vocabulary instruction involves the
    gradual shaping of word meanings through multiple
    exposures.
  • Teaching word parts enhances students
    understanding of terms.
  • Different types of words require different types
    of instruction.
  • Students should discuss the terms they are
    learning.
  • Students should play with words.
  • Instruction should focus on terms that have a
    high probability of enhancing academic success.

19
Building Academic Vocabulary A Six-Step Process
  • Introduce word
  • Student friendly descriptions, examples,
    explanations, images, etc.
  • Must connect to students prior knowledge
  • Students generalize meaning
  • Students create nonlinguistic representation
  • Engage students in word activities
  • Discuss words
  • Engage student play with words

20
Experience Observe
  • Strategy observer
  • What steps/processes did you observe?
  • Participant observer
  • What words, behaviors, evidence of student
    learning did you notice?
  • Participants
  • What did you learn? What worked for you? How
    did you feel as a learner using this strategy?

21
sesquipedalian
  • etymology (analysis of word origins parts)
  • sesqui (Latin, half as much again)
  • ped (foot)
  • -ian (one that is, one who)
  • a long word for a long word
  • Examples
  • antidisestablishmentarianism
  • pneumonoultramicroscopicsilicovolcanoconiosis
  • floccinaucinihilipilification

22
sesquipedalian
Nancy and Sluggo
Everything that coruscates with effulgence is not
ipso facto aurous . --All that glitters is not
gold.
http//www.wordsources.info/words-mod-sesquipedali
an-1-16.html
23
Please answer
  • Should teachers focus their direct instruction of
    vocabulary on sesquipedalian terms?

24
Experience Observe
  • Strategy observer
  • What steps/processes did you observe?
  • Participant observer
  • What words, behaviors, evidence of student
    learning did you notice?
  • Participants
  • What did you learn? What worked for you? How
    did you feel as a learner using this strategy?

25
Building Academic Vocabulary A Six-Step Process
  • Introduce word
  • Student friendly descriptions, examples,
    explanations, images, etc.
  • Must connect to students prior knowledge
  • Students generalize meaning
  • Students create nonlinguistic representation
  • Caution!
  • Monitor understanding carefully
  • May require more than one session

26
The Case Against Providing Only Dictionary
Definitions
  • When people first learn words, they understand
    them more as descriptions as opposed to
    definitions (Beck, McKeown, Kucan, 2002)

27
Research on Imagery as Elaboration
Students who used imagery to learn vocabulary,
on average, performed
of studies
(Pickering, 2007)
28
magnify
  • word parts
  • magn (large, great)
  • -ify (v. to do)

29
antagonist
  • Etymology
  • anta-, against
  • agon, contest
  • -ist, one who

30
antagonist
  • Etymology
  • anta-, against
  • agon, contest
  • -ist, one who

31
Building Academic Vocabulary A Six-Step Process
  • Introduce word
  • Student friendly descriptions, examples,
    explanations, images, etc.
  • Must connect to students prior knowledge
  • Students generalize meaning
  • Students create nonlinguistic representation
  • Engage students in word activities
  • Discuss words
  • Engage student play with words

32
Personal Reflection
  • What are my criteria for choosing words?
  • If someone were to ask my students how they learn
    new words in my class, what would my students
    say?
  • How do I encourage vocabulary learning for the
    long term?

33
Building Academic Vocabulary A Six-Step Process
  • Introduce word
  • Student friendly descriptions, examples,
    explanations, images, etc.
  • Must connect to students prior knowledge
  • Students generalize meaning
  • Students create nonlinguistic representation
  • Engage students in word activities
  • Discuss words
  • Engage student play with words

34
Massed vs. Distributed Practice
  • 24 focused practices to achieve 80 competency
    (Marzano, Pickering, Pollock, Instructional
    Strategies that Work, p. 67)

35
A Quick Note Student Note Taking
  • Organized
  • Cumulative
  • Published templates
  • www.ASCD.org
  • Teacher-created
  • Use tables in Word
  • Student notebooks
  • Designated section of notebook

Students must be able to adjust and build on
their understanding of words.
36
ASCD. (2005). Building Academic Vocabulary
Student Notebook. Retrieved September 20, 2006,
from http//shop.ascd.org/productdisplay.cfm?produ
ctid105154e
37
Building Academic Vocabulary A Six-Step Process
  • Introduce word
  • Student friendly descriptions, examples,
    explanations, images, etc.
  • Must connect to students prior knowledge
  • Students generalize meaning
  • Students create nonlinguistic representation
  • Engage students in word activities
  • Discuss words
  • Engage student play with words

38
Discussion Activities
  • Reading, writing, speaking, listening
  • Think-Pair-Share
  • Free association
  • Word displays / word walls, word encounters
  • Similarities differences, classification
  • Metaphors, analogies
  • Sentence Strings
  • ____ and ____ are similar because
  • ____ and ____ are different because
  • ____ is ____, but ___ is ____.
  • The skiing teacher said Maria was a novice on the
    ski slopes because

39
Discussion Activities
  • Graphic Organizers
  • Concept Map
  • Semantic Mapping
  • Frayer Model
  • Comparison Matrix

40
Essential Characteristics
Non-essential Characteristics
Examples
NON-examples
41
Student Sample
42
(Allen, 1999)
43
(Allen, 1999)
44
Student Discussion
  • Individual to Group
  • Identify share favorite, most interesting word
  • Pairs
  • Students compare entries for difficult words and
    agree on their information
  • Whats true, false, new, confusing?
  • Cooperative Groups
  • Take turns identifying difficult term, others
    provide information

45
Games
  • 3 Distinguishing Characteristics (Covington,
    1992)
  • Present manageable challenges
  • Arouse curiosity
  • Involve some degree of imagination, fantasy
  • When?
  • Periodic review rather than new words
  • Sponge activities
  • Remember
  • Use competition consciously!

46
Games
  • Jeopardy
  • Show graphics one at a time until students can
    answer What is
  • http//www.marzanoandassociates.com/html/resources
    .htm
  • Charades
  • Name That Category (100,000 Pyramid)
  • Pictionary
  • Taboo
  • Crosswords
  • Others?

47
Building Academic Vocabulary A Six-Step Process
  • Introduce word
  • Student friendly descriptions, examples,
    explanations, images, etc.
  • Must connect to students prior knowledge
  • Students generalize meaning
  • Students create nonlinguistic representation
  • Engage students in word activities
  • Discuss words
  • Engage student play with words

48
Personal Reflection
  • What are my criteria for choosing words?
  • If someone were to ask my students how they learn
    new words in my class, what would the students
    say?
  • How do I encourage vocabulary learning for the
    long term?

49
Learning Summary
  • Guiding Questions
  • What is the effect of direct vocabulary
    instruction on student achievement?
  • What is one effective strategy for the direct
    instruction of vocabulary?
  • So what?
  • What are the implications of this research and
    this method in your practice?
  • What questions must be answered? What barriers
    must be removed?

50
Resources
  • Jens Website
  • http//manila.esu6.org/jmadison/vocabulary
  • Allen, J. (1999). Words, Words, Words
    Teaching Vocabulary in Grades 4-12.
  • Beck, I., McKeown, M.G., Kucan, L. (2002).
    Bringing Words to Life Robust Vocabulary
    Instruction.
  • Graves, M.F. (2006). The Vocabulary Book
    Learning Instruction.
  • Marzano, R.J. (2004). Building Academic
    Background Knowledge for Academic Achievement.
  • Reading First. (2004). A Closer Look at the
    Five Essential Components of Effective Reading
    Instruction.
  • Vaughn, S. Linan-Thompson, S. (2004).
    Research-Based Methods of Reading Instruction
    Grades K-3.
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