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A New View on Academic Vocabulary in Middle School Sheleen DeLockery, Curriculum Coordinator Lori Ann Greidanus, Literacy Coach ILLINOIS READING COUNCIL SPRINGFIELD, IL MARCH 19, 2011

A New View on Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

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ILLINOIS READING COUNCIL SPRINGFIELD, IL MARCH 19, 2011. A New View on Academic Vocabulary in Middle School. Sheleen DeLockery , Curriculum Coordinator Lori Ann Greidanus , Literacy Coach. Goals for Today. Increase knowledge of research supporting explicit vocabulary instruction. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

A New View on Academic Vocabulary in Middle

School

Sheleen DeLockery, Curriculum CoordinatorLori Ann Greidanus, Literacy Coach

ILLINOIS READING COUNCILSPRINGFIELD, ILMARCH 19, 2011

Page 2: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Goals for Today•Increase knowledge of research

supporting explicit vocabulary instruction.•Increase knowledge of best practices for

vocabulary instruction.•Provide a variety of vocabulary activities.

Page 3: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

District 62• 4,749 students in

eight elementary buildings, two middle schools, and one year-round K-8 school

• Five Title I Schools• 40% Low-Income

district-wide• 7 Schools meeting AYP

White45%

Black3%

Hispanic37%

Asian11%

Multiracial4%

Page 4: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Our District’s Journey

Page 5: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Why Academic Vocabulary?

020406080

50

83

Percentile Rank on Test

• Student before and after explicit content area vocabulary instruction

-Marzano, 2005

Page 6: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Skiing and Math• The more terms

a person knows about a given subject, the easier it is to understand – and learn – new information related to that subject.

Page 7: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

• Children with limited vocabulary knowledge grow much more discrepant over time from their peers who have rich vocabulary knowledge.

• An average student in grades 3 through 12 learn approximately 3,000 new words per year, assuming he/she reads between 500,000 to a million words of text.-Hart and Risley, 1995

In a typical hour, the average child hears:Family Status Actual Differences in Quantity of WordsWelfare 616 wordsWorking Class 1,251 wordsProfessional 2,153 words

Page 8: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Marzano’s Six Steps to Academic Vocabulary1. Provide a description, explanation, or example of

the new term to students.2. Ask students to restate the description,

explanation, or example in their own words.3. Ask students to construct a picture, symbol, or

graphic representing the term or phrase.4. Engage students periodically in structured

vocabulary discussions.5. Periodically ask students to discuss the terms with

one another.6. Involve students in games that allow them to play

with terms.

Page 9: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Step 1: Provide students with a description, explanation or example.•Personal Story or Anecdote•Notebook Page

Page 10: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Step 2: Ask students to restate in their own words or provide an explanation of their own.•Notebook Page•Motivational Posters

Page 11: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Step 3: Ask students to construct a picture, symbol, or graphic representing the term or phrase.

•Picture Cube•Trading Cards

Page 12: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Step 4: Engage students periodically in structured vocabulary discussions.

•Creating Metaphors•Word Walls Learning

New Words* Say them* See them* Use themMultiple Times!

Page 13: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Step 5: Periodically ask students to discuss the terms with one another.

•Skits•Word Walls

Page 14: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Step 6: Involve students in games that allow them to play with terms.

•Bingo•Rivit

Page 15: A New View on  Academic Vocabulary in Middle School

Sheleen DeLockery – [email protected] Ann Greidanus – [email protected]