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Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

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Page 1: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Vocabulary:Defining Best Practice in

Reading First Schools

Michael C. McKennaUniversity of Virginia

Page 2: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Today’s Goals

Learn about how children acquire word meanings

Examine research findings on vocabulary instruction

Discuss scientifically-based instructional approaches

Form an action plan for your schools

Page 3: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What are some ways elementary-school children learn new vocabulary?

What are some ways elementary-school teachers typically teach new vocabulary?

Page 4: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Is the word vocabulary in your vocabulary?

Page 5: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

word-hoard

id

argon

estuary

Page 6: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What is vocabulary? Speaking vocabulary Listening vocabulary Reading vocabulary Writing vocabulary General vocabulary Technical vocabulary Meaning vocabulary

Modality

Domain

Page 7: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What is vocabulary? Speaking vocabulary Listening vocabulary Reading vocabulary Writing vocabulary General vocabulary Technical vocabulary Meaning vocabulary

Modality

Domain

Page 8: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What is vocabulary? Speaking vocabulary Listening vocabulary Reading vocabulary Writing vocabulary General vocabulary Technical vocabulary Meaning vocabulary

Modality

Domain

Page 9: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What is vocabulary? Speaking vocabulary Listening vocabulary Reading vocabulary Writing vocabulary General vocabulary Technical vocabulary Meaning vocabulary

Modality

Domain

Page 10: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What is vocabulary? Speaking vocabulary Listening vocabulary Reading vocabulary Writing vocabulary General vocabulary Technical vocabulary Meaning vocabulary

Modality

Domain

Page 11: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia
Page 12: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

1755 Dictionary of the English Language

Page 13: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

1755 Dictionary of the English Language

114,000 words

Page 14: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

1755 Dictionary of the English Language

114,000 words

impertransibilityquecknould

Page 15: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

1755 Dictionary of the English Language

2005 Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.)

114,000 words

Page 16: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

1755 Dictionary of the English Language

2005 Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.)

114,000 words

660,000+ words

Page 17: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

2005 Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.)

660,000+ words

webcamcyberphobic

doh

Page 18: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Doh!

Page 19: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

English users follow set rules for coining new words, thus adding greatly to the number of potential words in the language.

Page 20: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

English users follow set rules for coining new words, thus adding greatly to the number of potential words in the language.

The postman likes our street because it is dogless.

Page 21: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Are you a logophile?

Page 22: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Are you a logophile?

words

Page 23: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

A Vocabulary Challenge

To comprehend what we read, at least 95% of the words must be recognized

automatically.

How is this possible given the number of words in English?

Page 24: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

50K

40K

30K

20K

10K

0

K 12

5,000 •1,500 •

Page 25: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

50K

40K

30K

20K

10K

0

K 12

5,0001,500

45,000

17,000

Page 26: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

“Vocabulary levels diverge greatly during the primary years, and virtually nothing effective is done about this in schools.” (p. 29)

Biemiller, A. (2004). Teaching vocabulary in the primary grades.In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 28-40). New York: Guilford.

Andy Biemiller

Page 27: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Oral vocabulary at the end of first grade is a significant predictor of comprehension ten years later.

Cunningham, A.E., & Stanovich, K.E. (1997). Early reading acquisition and its relation to experience and ability 10 years later. Developmental Psychology, 33, 934-945.

Page 28: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Why is a large vocabulary associated with good

comprehension?

Page 29: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Instrumental Hypothesis

Vocabulary aids comprehension by providing the reader with a tool, or instrument.

Page 30: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Knowledge Hypothesis

It’s not so much the words themselves that help, but the knowledge they represent.

Page 31: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Aptitude Hypothesis

Comprehension and vocabulary are correlated “not because one causes the other, but because both reflect a more general underlying verbal aptitude.” – Stahl & Nagy (2005)

Page 32: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Access Hypothesis

A larger vocabulary means

a deeper understanding of words (including nuances of meaning)

quicker access to words in the lexicon

flexibility in deciding among multiple meanings

Page 33: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Reciprocal Hypothesis

Being a better reader makes it possible for

you to read more

Reading more gives you a bigger

vocabulary

Having a bigger vocabulary makes you a better reader.

Page 34: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Four Obstacles to Acquiring a Large Vocabulary

1. The number of words in English is very large.

2. Academic English differs from the kind of English used at home.

3. Word knowledge involves far more than learning definitions.

4. Sources of information about words are often hard to use or unhelpful.

– Stahl & Nagy (2005)

Page 35: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

How do we learn words from experiences?

Page 36: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

gavagai

An aborigine points to a running rabbit and says “Gavagai.” Can you infer the word’s meaning?

Page 37: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Each encounter with a word helps a child narrow its meaning. For example, if he next hears the word gavagai used to refer to a sitting rabbit, the child will infer that running is not connected with the meaning.

Page 38: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Young children learn word meanings from one-on-one interactions with parents and siblings. These interactions may be rich or poor. Consider two examples based on Hart and Risley’s (1995) comparison of families of different socioeconomic levels.

Page 39: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Do I have to eat these?

Yeah.

Page 40: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Do I have to eat these?

Yes, because they have vitamins that will help you grow and get stronger.

“Motherese”

Page 41: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What does it mean to know a word?

Page 42: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

A Continuum of Word Knowledge

No knowledge

A vague sense of the meaning

Narrow knowledge with aid of context

Good knowledge but shaky recall

Rich, decontextualized knowledge,connected to other word meanings

Page 43: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

A Continuum of Word Knowledge

No knowledge

A vague sense of the meaning

Narrow knowledge with aid of context

Good knowledge but shaky recall

Rich, decontextualized knowledge,connected to other word meanings

Page 44: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Reading System (Adams)

Reading Writing Speech

MeaningProcessor

Phonological Processor

OrthographicProcessor

ContextProcessor

Page 45: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Reading System (Adams)

Reading Writing Speech

MeaningProcessor

Phonological Processor

OrthographicProcessor

ContextProcessor

Lexicon

Page 46: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

lexicon

That part of long-term memory devoted to word knowledge

Page 47: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

How is a word stored in the lexicon?

Page 48: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

Page 49: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

c-a-t

Page 50: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

pet

Page 51: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 52: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 53: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 54: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

dog

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 55: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

dog

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 56: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

dog

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 57: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Dual Coding Theory

Two systems are involved in learning words. One contains verbal information, the other non-verbal (images). When we learn a word, real-world images that we associate with the concept are also stored. Accessing a word in the lexicon therefore involves both the verbal system and non-verbal (imagery) system.

~ Moral ~When teaching new words, use pictures and other images where possible.

Page 58: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

cat

/kat/

dog

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

Page 59: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Nonverbal (Imagery) System

Page 60: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

New meanings and even new pronunciations of a word may be added to a child’s lexicon over time.

produce

próduce

Raw veggies

prodúce

to make

Page 61: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia
Page 62: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Biemiller, A. (2004). Teaching vocabulary in the primary grades.In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 28-40). New York: Guilford.

K 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 •••

leanTo rest

oneobject againstanother

To rely on anotherperson

forsupport

Page 63: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Is wide reading enough?

Page 64: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Why Wide Reading Why Wide Reading Is Enough Is Not Enough

Vocabulary size andthe amount a child reads are correlated.

Direct instruction cannot possibly account for the number of word meanings children acquire.

Context is generally unreliable as a means of inferring word meanings.

Most words occur too infrequently to provide the number of exposures needed to learn them.

Marzano, R.J. (2004). The developing vision of vocabulary instruction. In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 100-117). New York: Guilford.

Page 65: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

“There is no obvious reason why direct vocabulary instruction and wide reading cannot work in tandem.”

– Marzano (2004, p. 112)

RobertMarzano

Page 66: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

The Vocabulary Catch-22

Children need to learn more words to read well, but they need to read well to

learn more words.

McKenna, M.C. (2004). Teaching vocabulary to struggling older readers. Perspectives, 30(1), 13-16.

Page 67: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Perhaps one of the most important reasons why teachers need to pay attention to vocabulary is that vocabulary knowledge is cumulative. The more words you know, the easier it is to learn yet more words.

– Stahl & Nagy (2005)

Page 68: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What about context clues?

Page 69: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Four Types of Contexts

1. Directive (provides powerful clues)“Sue was talkative but Bill was taciturn.”

2. General (helps categorize a word)“She’d had measles, mumps, and varicella.”

3. Nondirective (offers very little help)“The dress was taupe.”

4. Misdirective (can be misleading)“He was huge, muscular, and adroit.”

– Beck & McKeown (2004)

Page 70: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Teaching Students about Context

Remind them that context does not always provide strong clues.

Remember that many students may have difficulty making inferences about words from context.

Model the process when possible.

– Beck & McKeown (2004)

Page 71: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Three Broad Categories of Clues

1. Pictorial and Typographic

The crescent moon shone on the lawn.

“My dad calls that a ‘fingernail moon,’ ” said Ed.

Page 72: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Three Broad Categories of Clues

2. Syntactic

A zerp was jumming the zum.

Page 73: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Three Broad Categories of Clues

3. Semantic

She peeled a juicy, red zum.

Page 74: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Some Types of Semantic CluesDefinition The vole, a small rodent, has a short tail.Antonym Sue was adroit but Bill was clumsy. Synonym The soup was hot – scalding, in fact.Example Periwinkle was her favorite color.General The room was disheveled. Clothes and dirty

dishes were everywhere. Chairs were overturned, and trash littered the floor.

Series Would you like cake, peach pie, or a flan?Mood The day was dull and dark. Clouds hung low

and a feeling of melancholy was everywhere.Experience A pair of crows cawed raucously.Expression He was as famished as a bear.

Edwards, E.C., Font, G., Baumann, J.F., & Boland, E. (2004). Unlocking word meanings: Strategies and guidelines for teaching morphemic and contextual analysis. In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 159-176). New York: Guilford.

Page 75: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Some Types of Semantic CluesDefinition The vole, a small rodent, has a short tail.Antonym Sue was adroit but Bill was clumsy. Synonym The soup was hot – scalding, in fact.Example Periwinkle was her favorite color.General The room was disheveled. Clothes and dirty

dishes were everywhere. Chairs were overturned, and trash littered the floor.

Series Would you like cake, peach pie, or a flan?Mood The day was dull and dark. Clouds hung low

and a feeling of melancholy was everywhere.Experience A pair of crows cawed raucously.Expression He was as famished as a bear.

Edwards, E.C., Font, G., Baumann, J.F., & Boland, E. (2004). Unlocking word meanings: Strategies and guidelines for teaching morphemic and contextual analysis. In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 159-176). New York: Guilford.

Page 76: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

But remember . . .

Teaching context clues through contrived contexts is unlikely to transfer to natural contexts.

– Beck, McKeown, & Kucan (2002)

Page 77: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

How do I know which words to teach?

Page 78: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Two characteristics that make a word inappropriate for teaching:

1. We can’t define it in terms that the students know.

2. The students are not likely to find the word useful or interesting.

– Beck & McKeown (2004)

Page 79: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

word family

A group of words formed from a single root word

historyhistoric

prehistorichistoricalhistorian

Page 80: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Beck and McKeown’s Three TiersTier 3 • Rare words

• 73,500 word families K-12• Usually content-area related• Examples: isotope, estuary

Tier 2 • Important to academic success• 7,000 word families• Not limited to one content area• Examples: fortunate, ridiculous

Tier 1 • The most familiar words• 8,000 word families• Known by average 3rd grader• Examples: happy, go

Page 81: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Beck and McKeown’s Three TiersTier 3 • Rare words

• 73,500 word families K-12• Usually content-area related• Examples: isotope, estuary

Tier 2 • Important to academic success• 7,000 word families• Not limited to one content area• Examples: fortunate, ridiculous

Tier 1 • The most familiar words• 8,000 word families• Known by average 3rd grader• Examples: happy, go

Page 82: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Beck and McKeown’s Three TiersTier 3 • Rare words

• 73,500 word families K-12• Usually content-area related• Examples: isotope, estuary

Tier 2 • Important to academic success• 7,000 word families• Not limited to one content area• Examples: fortunate, ridiculous

Tier 1 • The most familiar words• 8,000 word families• Known by average 3rd grader• Examples: happy, go

Page 83: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Beck and McKeown’s Three TiersTier 3 • Rare words

• 73,500 word families K-12• Often content-area related• Examples: isotope, estuary

Tier 2 • Important to academic success• 7,000 word families• Not limited to one content area• Examples: fortunate, ridiculous

Tier 1 • The most familiar words• 8,000 word families• Known by average 3rd grader• Examples: happy, go

Page 84: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Beck and McKeown’s Three TiersTier 3 • Rare words

• 73,500 word families K-12• Often content-area related• Examples: isotope, estuary

Tier 2 • Important to academic success• 7,000 word families• Not limited to one content area• Examples: fortunate, ridiculous

Tier 1 • The most familiar words• 8,000 word families• Known by average 3rd grader• Examples: happy, go

Page 85: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Beck and McKeown’s Three TiersTier 3 • Rare words

• 73,500 word families K-12• Often content-area related• Examples: isotope, estuary

Tier 2 • Important to academic success• 7,000 word families• Not limited to one content area• Examples: fortunate, ridiculous

Tier 1 • The most familiar words• 8,000 word families• Known by average 3rd grader• Examples: happy, go

“Goldilocks” Words– Stahl & Stahl, 2004

Page 86: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia
Page 87: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

How intensive should vocabulary instruction be?

Page 88: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Three Types of WordsTo Teach

Graves, M.F. (1986). Vocabulary learning and instruction, In E.Z.Rothkopf (Ed.), Review of research in education (Vol. 13, pp. 49-91). Washington, DC: AERA.

Page 89: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

1. Words already in the student’s oral vocabulary, which he or she needs to learn to recognize in print.

These are words that a child needs to learn to decode or recognize by sight. (Stahl & Nagy, 2005)

Page 90: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

2. Words not in the student’s oral vocabulary, but which are labels for concepts already familiar to the student.

The student may need to learn that apologize means to say one is sorry, or that elaborate means pretty much the same as complicated. These words may represent different shades of meaning from their synonym, but knowledge of the more frequent synonym will usually get a reader through a text containing that word. The different shades will be learned through continued exposure. Less intensive instruction may suffice. (Stahl & Nagy, 2005)

Page 91: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

3. Words not in the student’s oral vocabulary that refer to concepts new to the student.

For example, the student may not know the word osmosis, or feudalism, or exponential. In such a case, it is not simply a matter of not knowing the word: The student is likely to be totally unfamiliar with the concept. In this case, a definition or other brief explanation is unlikely to help. Rather, a teacher would need to spend a great deal of time examining such concepts. (Stahl & Nagy, 2005)

Page 92: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Words in OralVocabulary

Known Concepts not Yet Associated with New Words

W3 W2 W1

Page 93: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Words in OralVocabulary

Known Concepts not Yet Associated with New Words

W3 W2 W1

Page 94: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Words in OralVocabulary

Known Concepts not Yet Associated with New Words

W3 W2 W1

Page 95: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Words in OralVocabulary

Known Concepts not Yet Associated with New Words

W3 W2 W1

Page 96: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What are some of the guiding principles of

teaching vocabulary?

Page 97: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Preteach key words to improve comprehension.

Guiding Principle

Page 98: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

In 1367, Marain and the settlements ended a seven-year war with the Langurians and Pitoks. As a result of this war, Languria was driven out of East Bacol. Marain would now rule Laman and the other lands that once belonged to Languria. This brought peace to the Bacolean settlements. The settlers no longer had to worry about attacks from Laman. The Bacoleans were happy to be part of Marain in 1367. Yet a dozen years later, these same people would be fighting the Marish for independence, or freedom from United Marain’s rule.

Page 99: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

In 1763, Britain and the colonies ended a seven-year war with the French and Indians. As a result of this war, France was driven out of North America. Britain would now rule Canada and the other lands that once belonged to France. This brought peace to the American colonies. The settlers no longer had to worry about attacks from Canada. The Americans were happy to be part of Britain in 1763. Yet a dozen years later, these same people would be fighting the British for independence, or freedom from Great Britain’s rule.

Page 100: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia
Page 101: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Provide more than definitions.

Guiding Principle

Page 102: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

WORD = DEFINITION

Stimulus Response

Page 103: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

WORD = DEFINITION

Stimulus Response

truncate “to cut off”

Page 104: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

WORD = DEFINITION

Stimulus Response

truncate “to cut off”

“She truncated the lights.”

Page 105: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Combine definitions and contextual examples.

Guiding Principle

Page 106: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Minimize rote copying of definitions.

Guiding Principle

Page 107: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Introduce new words in related clusters.

Guiding Principle

Page 108: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

wing

antennae leg

abdomen

thorax

In content areas, clustering words is natural!

Page 109: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

But general vocabulary words can be clustered if you work at

it!

Page 110: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia
Page 111: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia
Page 112: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Provide brief, periodic review.

Guiding Principle

Page 113: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

A Thought Experiment

Page 114: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Group 1

• Receives 1 hour of direct instruction on 20 new words

• Spends 1 full hour of intense review on all 20 words

• This hour is uninterrupted.

Page 115: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Group 2

Page 116: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Group 2

• Receives 1 hour of direct instruction on 20 new words

• Spends 1 full hour of intense review on all 20 words

Page 117: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Group 2

• Receives 1 hour of direct instruction on 20 new words

• Spends 1 full hour of intense review on all 20 words

• This hour is broken into 6 10-minute sessions, 1 per month for 6 months.

Page 118: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Assuming that no one encountered any of the 20 words again, which group would do better on a test after a delay of 10 years?

Page 119: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Massedvs.

DistributedPractice

Page 120: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What did the National Reading Panel conclude

about teaching vocabulary?

Page 121: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

NRP Findings on Vocabulary

Teaching vocabulary improves general comprehension ability.

Preteaching vocabulary helps both word learning and comprehension of a selection.

Much vocabulary is acquired through incidental exposure.

Repeated exposures in a variety of contexts are important.

Page 122: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

NRP Findings on Vocabulary

A combination of definitions and contextual examples works better than either one alone.

Many instructional methods can be effective in teaching vocabulary.

Instructional methods should result in active engagement.

Both direct and indirect methods should be used.

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NRP Findings on Vocabulary

The more connections that are made to a word, the better the word tends to be learned.

Computer applications can be effective. The effectiveness of some instructional

methods depends on the age or ability of the children.

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What the NRP said they didn’t know about vocabulary instruction

Which methods work best with students of different ages and abilities?

How can technology best be used to teach vocabulary? How is vocabulary best integrated with comprehension

instruction? What combinations of instructional methods tend to work

best? What are the best ways to assess vocabulary?

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To what extent do you see these findings reflected in your core materials?

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What are some of the most effective ways of teaching vocabulary?

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Some Research-Based Techniques

Read-Alouds Semantic Feature Analysis Graphic Organizers List-Group-Label Semantic Maps (word webs) Word Lines Word Sorts Possible Sentences

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Read-Alouds

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“Adding three root words a day is the average daily number of words learned by primary age children with the largest vocabularies.” (p. 37)

Biemiller, A. (2004). Teaching vocabulary in the primary grades.In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 28-40). New York: Guilford.

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“Adding three root words a day is the average daily number of words learned by primary age children with the largest vocabularies.” (p. 37)

Biemiller, A. (2004). Teaching vocabulary in the primary grades.In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 28-40). New York: Guilford.

3 words x 140 days 400 words per year

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Planning a Read-Aloud Choose engaging, well-illustrated books. A number of words should be unknown to about

half the students. Choose 3 target words that are important for

comprehension but likely to be unfamiliar. Keep track of the words you choose. Plan to repeat the read-aloud. Plan for small-group sessions (2-5 students). Plan multiple exposures in the days following.

Page 132: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Conducting a Read-Aloud Be “performance oriented”; read with expression. Include “rich, dialogic discussion.”

Activate prior knowledge. Link the story to experiences of students. Elicit responses from students.

Give direct, clear, and simple instruction in word meanings before the read-aloud.

Give a sentence context from the story in advance.

Discuss words before and after the story. Ignore rare words. (Biemiller) Embed quick definitions while reading. (Biemiller) Do not display pictures while reading (Beck et al.)

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Storybook InterventionDay 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 4 Day 5 Day 6

Book 1

Intro &

1st Read-Aloud

Book 2

Intro &

1st Read-Aloud

Book 1

2nd Read-Aloud

Book 2

2nd Read-Aloud

Vocabulary

Activities

Coyne, M.D., Simmons, D.C., & Kame’enui, E.J. (2004). Vocabulary instruction for young children at risk of experiencing reading difficulties: Teaching word meanings during shared storybook readings. In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 41-58). New York: Guilford.

Page 134: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

Three Read-Alouds per Day

Book InterruptionsNew Book None

Old Book 1 Some, to remind students of words

Old Book 2 Some, to remind students of words

Biemiller, A. (2004). Teaching vocabulary in the primary grades.In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 28-40). New York: Guilford.

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Warning!

Spending too much time discussing read-alouds may detract from valuable reading practice.

– Stahl (1998).

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A Closer Look at Definitions

golf

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golf n.1. a good walk spoiled

(Mark Twain)

2. a game in which a player using special clubs attempts to sink a ball with as few strokes as possible into each of the 9 or 18 successive holes on a course (Webster)

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a game in which a player using special clubs attempts to sink a ball with as few strokes as possible into each of the 9 or 18 successive holes on a course

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a game in which a player using special clubs attempts to sink a ball with as few strokes as possible into each of the 9 or 18 successive holes on a course

class distinguishing features

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a game in which a player using special clubs attempts to sink a ball with as few strokes as possible into each of the 9 or 18 successive holes on a course

class distinguishing features

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class distinguishing features

Aristotle

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Semantic Feature Analysis

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humans adult female

woman + +

man + o

girl o +

boy o o

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games clubs ball o

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball o

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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games clubs ball

golf + +

hockey + o

basketball o +

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popinary

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popinary

“a fry cook”

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popinary

“a fry cook”

Mrs. Byrne's Dictionary of Unusual, Obscure, and Preposterous Words: Gathered from Numerous and Diverse Authoritative Sources

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + o + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker + + + adult female

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cooks fries makes bakesthings salads

popinary + o o

chef + + +

baker s + + adult female

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Characters Wise Adventurous

Frog

Toad

Curious George

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How can feature analysis be used in the primary grades?

How early can it be effective?

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Graphic Organizers

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A graphic organizer is a diagram that shows how key terms are

related.

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What’s so great about them?

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What’s so great about them?

They help kids “see” abstract content.

There is little to “read.”

They are easy to construct and discuss.

Technical terms can be taught in clusters.

They enhance recall and understanding.

They have an impressive research base.

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Time Lines

(and other continua)

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Columbus Pilgrims American reaches land at RevolutionNorth America Plymouth begins

1500 1600 1700 1800

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Goldilocks Goldilocks Goldilocks finds cottage eats porridge goes upstairs

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pupa

egg

larvaadult

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Tree Diagrams

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Musical Instruments

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Musical Instruments

wind nonwind

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Musical Instruments

wind nonwind

brass woodwind

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Musical Instruments

wind nonwind

brass woodwind string percussion

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Musical Instruments

wind nonwind

brass woodwind string percussion

trumpet clarinet violin drum

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Venn Diagrams

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Frog and Toad Curious George

No people

AnimalCharacters

Animals talk

Could happen

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Blue People

Thin PeopleTall People

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Blue People

Thin PeopleTall People

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Blue People

Thin PeopleTall People

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drugsstimulants

depressantsalcohol

barbituatescaffeine

dexadrine

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drugsstimulants depressants

caffeinedexadrine

alcoholbarbituates

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drugsstimulants depressants

caffeine dexadrine alcohol barbituates

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wing

antennae leg

abdomen

thorax

Labeled Picture

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Which types of graphic organizers are likely to be effective with primary children?

What about science and social studies materials?

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List-Group-Label

Hilda Taba

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ListStudents brainstorm all the words they can recall at the end of a unit.

GroupStudents suggest logical ways to group the words.

LabelStudents suggest a label for each group they form.

Page 203: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

ListStudents brainstorm all the words they can recall at the end of a unit.

GroupStudents suggest logical ways to group the words.

LabelStudents suggest a label for each group they form.

Page 204: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

ListStudents brainstorm all the words they can recall at the end of a unit.

GroupStudents suggest logical ways to group the words.

LabelStudents suggest a label for each group they form.

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no legs garterboa

venomcobra

fang scales

coral tail

rattlecopperhead

treesholes

ground

Page 206: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

no legs garterboa

venomcobra

fang scales

coral tail

rattlecopperhead

treesholes

ground

Page 207: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

no legs garterboa

venomcobra

fang scales

coral tail

rattlecopperhead

treesholes

ground

Kinds of Snakes garter boa copperhead cobra coral

Things Snakes Might Have rattle scales fang no legs venom tail

Where Snakes Are Found trees holes ground

Page 208: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

no legs garterboa

venomcobra

fang scales

coral tail

rattlecopperhead

treesholes

ground

Kinds of Snakes garter boa copperhead cobra coral

Things Snakes Might Have rattle scales fang no legs venom tail

Where Snakes Are Found trees holes ground

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Can List-Group-Label be useful in the primary grades? Would it need to be modified?

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Semantic Maps

(Word Webs)

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BrainstormingStudents offer ideas related to a topic.

MappingTeacher and students form categories and map the words into a diagram.

ReadingStudents read a nonfiction selection.

Completing the MapTeacher and students revisit the map and together refine and expand it.

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no legs garterboa

venomcobra

fang scales

coral tail

rattlecopperhead

treesholes

ground

Kinds of Snakes garter boa copperhead cobra coral

Things Snakes Might Have rattle scales fang no legs venom tail

Where Snakes Are Found trees holes ground

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Snakes

treesholes

ground

garterboa

copperheadcobracoral

Kinds Where

Things Snakes Might Have

rattle no legsscales venomfang tail

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Semantic maps have the advantage of mirroring how

words are stored in the lexicon.

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cat

/kat/

dog

mammal

4 legs

“meow”c-a-t

animal

petlion

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Word Lines

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hot cold

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hot tepid cold

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hot tepid cold

sweltering

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hot tepid cold

sweltering chilly

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hot tepid cold

sweltering chilly

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Can you think of additional examples of word lines, perhaps not based on antonym anchors?

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Word Sorts

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thorax pupaabdomen antennaewing larvaadult headegg leg

Open Sort Categories are not given.

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Closed Sort Parts Stages

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thorax pupaabdomen eggwing larvahead adultlegantennae

Closed Sort Parts Stages

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Now try your hand at an open word sort!

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Possible Sentences

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1. Present a list of 8-12 words the students will encounter in the new text.

2. Add a few familiar terms.3. Ask for sentences containing at

least two of the words.4. Teach the text.5. Return to the sentences.6. Together decide whether they are

correct or can be edited to make them so.

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connotationword familydual coding

lexiconsyntactic clue

distributed practiceeponymtoponympopinary

worddefinition

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Some Research-Based Techniques

Read-Alouds Semantic Feature Analysis Graphic Organizers List-Group-Label Semantic Maps (word webs) Word Lines Word Sorts Possible Sentences

Page 237: Vocabulary: Defining Best Practice in Reading First Schools Michael C. McKenna University of Virginia

What do all of these techniques (except one) have in

common?

1. They involve clusters of related words.

2. They encourage children to categorize.

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What’s the exception?

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Huckleberry Finn

fan-tods

yallerboys

mudcat

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Illinois

Kentucky

Tennessee

Mississippi

Louisiana

Arkansas

Missouri

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Illinois

Kentucky

Tennessee

Mississippi

Louisiana

Arkansas

Missouri

Hannibal

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Illinois

Kentucky

Tennessee

Mississippi

Louisiana

Arkansas

Missouri

Hannibal

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More Suggestions

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Echo student talk, using richer vocabulary.

I wrote this.

Wonderful. I hope you told me exactly what you saw on your trip to the zoo.

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“Sprinkle” your classroom with vocabulary.

Beck & McKeown (2004)

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Talk around words.

Stahl & Stahl (2004)

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Be a Word Wizard!wary scowl ridiculous fortunate

Tom Sue Ed Juan Maria Lakesha Paul Jack

– Beck & McKeown (2004)

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Ask “silly questions.”

– Beck & McKeown (2004)

Would a fortunate person scowl?

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Encourage word play

(including teachers!)

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Words Named for People(eponyms)

• einsteinium• teddy bear• boycott• pasteurize• watt• decibel• saxophone• braille

• silhouette• sousaphone• zinnia• sideburns• shrapnel• magnolia• hooligan• gardenia

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Words Named for Places(toponyms)

• bikini• tuxedo• badminton• hamburger• californium• uranium• plutonium• damask

• ottoman• bayonet• cologne• frankfurter• magenta• marathon• tangerine• manila

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Words with Unusual Stories

• bazooka• bleachers• blurb• cowlick• crowbar• Dixie• gas• goatee

• googol• gorilla• jeep• jumbo• sandwich• Pacific• serendipity• tank

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Blends (Portmanteaus)

• beefalo• bit• brunch• caplet• cockapoo• electrocute• guestimate• infomercial

• jack rabbit• liger• lox• modem• moped• motel• sitcom• skort

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More Blends . . .

• slurb• smog• snazzy• splatter• spork (why not

foon?)• squiggle• tangelo

• telethon• tiglon• transister• twiddle• zap• zedonk• breen

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Acronyms

• scuba

• radar

• sonar

• laser

• snafu

• fubar

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Mnemonics

principle

rule

principal

pal

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Connotations

What’s the difference between a fiddle and a violin?

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What can we do increasechildren’s vocabularies in

Title I schools?

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1. Make vocabulary a schoolwide goal

Amend your plan.

Establish instructional goals.

Raise consciousness.

Communicate expectations.

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2. Provide professional development

Focus on research-based methods.

Ensure ties to actual materials.

Provide follow-up to aid implementation.

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3. Establish teacher study groups

Organize groups by grade level.

Provide time for discussion.

Reward participation.

Encourage administrator participation.

Select resource books.

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4. Consider supplemental and intervention programs

Tie their use to assessments.

Establish guidelines for use.

Locate product reviews.

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http://www.fcrr.org

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“In the long run, effective intervention will involve extended vocabulary work as a normal part of a primary curriculum.” (p. 34)

Biemiller, A. (2004). Teaching vocabulary in the primary grades.In J.F. Baumann & E.J. Kame’enui (Eds.), Vocabulary instruction: Research to practice (pp. 28-40). New York: Guilford.

AndyBiemiller

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Where do we start in our schools?

What steps can we take to promote greater vocabulary growth?

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Suggested ReferencesBaumann, J.F., & Kame’enui, E.J. (2004). Vocabulary

instruction: Research to practice. New York: Guilford.Bear, D.R., Invernizzi, M., Templeton, S.R., & Johnston, F.

Words their way (3rd ed.). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.

Beck, I.L., McKeown, M.G., & Kucan, L. (2002). Bringing words to life: Robust vocabulary instruction. New York: Guilford.

Nagy, W.E. (1988). Teaching vocabulary to improve reading comprehension. Newark, DE: IRA.

Stahl, S.A. (1999). Vocabulary development. Cambridge, MA: Brookline Books.

Stahl, S.A., & Kapinus, B.A. (2001). Word power: What every educator needs to know about teaching vocabulary. Washington, DC: NEA.

Stahl, S.A., & Nagy, W.E. (2005). Teaching word meanings.Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.