Doing It Differently: Tips for Teaching Vocabulary Domingo Trevino
Transcription
Doing It Differently: Tips for Teaching Vocabulary Domingo Trevino
Developing Academic LanguageTIPS For Teaching Academic Vocabulary Session – Part 2 November 3, 2014 Maria Chavez- ESL Specialist Adapted from Rebecca Alber’s Doing it Differently: Tips for Teaching Vocabulary Presentation Objectives: • Content Objective: • I will identify and distinguish effective ways to teach vocabulary in my classroom. • Language Objective: • I will review and discuss strategies to effectively teach vocabulary in my classroom. Tell Us When… • Every Monday, my seventh grade English teacher would have us copy a list of 25 words she'd written on the board. We'd then look up the dictionary definitions and copy those down. For homework, we'd rewrite each word seven times. • Good, now you know it. Test on Friday and never for those 25 words to be seen again. Poof. Old school, yes. Did it work? I don't remember. Probably not. Share personal experiences when you learned new words! (Think, Write, Share) 3 minute activity We all know that… • Copying definitions from the dictionary, we would probably all agree, is not an effective way to learn vocabulary. Passive learning hardly ever is. So what do we do differently? • The truth is, and the research shows, students need multiple and various exposures to a word before they fully understand that word and can apply it. • They also need to learn words in context, not stand alone lists that come and go each week. The way we learn words in context, or implicitly, is by reading, and applying the words learned when we speak and write. Our Goal is … • Provide students with the opportunity to use new vocabulary in context, in reading, speaking and writing. Ah, so many words, so little time!!! TASK # 1 • Selecting and Ranking Words- When choosing which words to target, we don't have to do it alone. We will create a list of 10 word to target in our classroom… • How will be target this task * First off, rather than waste time compiling a new lists, we will let the kids skim and select their own words from our previous academic vocabulary list. Student Activity 1 • Provide students with list of previously taught words… • Read all the words aloud- Choral reading, popcorn reading, reciprocal reading • Students will …. • Read through them- silently • Complete Vocabulary Comprehension Chart Vocabulary Comprehension Chart • Students will • writes down words, and rates each one as "know it," "sort of know it," or "don't know it at all.” • on the same paper, they will write a definition or "my guess on meaning" for the words they know and kind of know (No dictionaries!) NOTE: Before they turn in these comprehension charts, be sure to emphasize this is not about "being right" but that they are providing you with information to guide next steps in class vocabulary instruction. TASK 1 Continued…. Selecting and Ranking Words Use the results as a formative assessment. This data will show you which words they know, those they have some understanding of, and those words that are completely foreign to them. * Using the charts your kids created, pick the"kind of" and "don't know at all" words. * You now have a new vocabulary list. –10 words TASK 1 Due- November 7, 2014 It's time to teach Task 2 • Teaching Words- Teach each word to the students using Robert Marzano’s Six Step Process. (If you haven't heard of him, I'd like to introduce Robert Marzano.) This guy is pretty amazing, having spent countless hours observing students and teachers. An education researcher and teacher, he stresses that in all content areas, direct vocabulary instruction is essential and suggests six steps. Marzano's six steps do something revolutionary to vocabulary learning: They make it fun. Students think about, talk about, apply, and play with new words. Marzano’s Six Steps • Step one: The teacher explains a new word, going beyond reciting its definition (tap into prior knowledge, use imagery). • Step two: Students restate or explain the new word in their own words (verbally and/or in writing). • Step three: Ask students to create a non-linguistic representation of the word (a picture, or symbolic representation). • Step four: Students engage in activities to deepen their knowledge of the new word (compare words, classify terms, write their own sentences using the word). • Step five: Students discuss the new word (pair-share, elbow partners). • Step six: Students periodically play games to review new vocabulary (Guess the word, Jeopardy, Matamosca). The Rationale • At this point, you might be thinking that there just isn't enough time for all this pre-reading word analysis, direct instruction of vocabulary, and game playing. (You have your content to teach!) Let’s work together to improve our students vocabulary… • Vocabulary is the best single indicator of intellectual ability and an accurate predictor of success at school. -- W.B. Elley Keep in mind... • Once you have your list developed, you will only target one word a week. (10 weeks) • You have already exposed your students to these words. Also… • Marzano’s Six Steps can be spread out throughout the week. They are not intended to be done within a day. * Each step will take only a few minutes; They can be done as a bell ringer or ticket out. Let’s take a look at them again… Monday Step one: The teacher explains a new word, going beyond reciting its definition (tap into prior knowledge of students, use imagery). Tuesday Step two: Students restate or explain the new word in their own words (verbally and/or in writing). Wednesday Step three: Ask students to create a non-linguistic representation of the word (a picture, or symbolic representation). Thursday Step four: Students engage in activities to deepen their knowledge of the new word (compare words, classify terms, write their own sentences). Friday After five weeks… (5 words) Step five: Students discuss the new word (pair-share, elbow partners). Step six: Students periodically play games to review new vocabulary (Pyramid, Jeopardy, Telephone) SIOP:C1-F9 Key Vocabulary Emphasized (e.g. introduced, written, repeated, and highlighted for students to see) Teaching Ideas & Activities Word Parts: Roots and Affixes Personal Dictionaries Contextualizing Key Vocabulary Cognates Vocabulary Self-Collection Strategy (VSS) Link Up Word Wall Pick Ten Words 4-Corners Vocabulary Charts/Carousel Team TPR (Total Physical Response) Concept Definition Map Team Word Wall Cloze Sentences Updating Your Status Word Generation Signal Words Word Study Books Vocabulary Key Rings Vocabulary Games Milling to Music Self-Assessment Predict Definitions Vocabulary Scan Vocabulary Alive Four Corner Vocabulary Additional Resources (Books to help you focus and fine-tune your vocabulary instruction) • Bringing Words to Life by Isabel Beck • Vocabulary Games for the Classroom by Lindsey Carlton and Robert J. Marzano • Words, Words, Words by Janet Allen • Teaching Basic and Advanced Vocabulary: A Framework for Direct Instruction by Robert J. Marzano • The Literacy Cookbook by Sarah Tantillo • Making Content Comprehensible for English Learners The SIOP Model by Jana Echeverria, MaryEllen Vogt, and Deborah J. Short Completion Dates : • TASK 1 – November 7, 2014 – List of ten words to be reviewed by week • TASK 2 – Review all 10 words by -February 13, 2015 • Next Session – February 16, 2015 Questions? • Ticket Out- On a post it• What are the our two tasks for building academic vocabulary?