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Susan Jones, M.Ed. 4/99 |
| Vocabulary is a weak area for many students, but
much "vocabulary instruction" ends up being handwriting practice. Edwin
Ellis and Theresa Farmer describe the situation eloquently in the introduction
to their clarifying strategy to teach vocabulary. To quote:
"When you think of vocabulary, there is a good
chance that you think of long lists of words from social studies or science
textbooks, spelling word lists, or even the humongous lists of terms to
study for college entrance exams. Zillions of flash cards also may come
to mind. No doubt you share the common childhood experience of having to
"go look up the words in a dictionary, write the definition, and then write
a sentence using the term" -- but how much of that vocabulary do you remember
now? ..In other words, many of the traditional techniques teachers
and students use to learn vocabulary does not work because most students,
not just those with learning problems, rarely remember the meanings of
new terms beyond the test. This raises a very disconcerting question: If
students don't remember the definitions of new terms after the test, why
bother requiring them to memorize those definitions in the first place
since it seems to be a waste of time?"
Have structure and organization behind the words you present. Rather than randomly selected words "at their grade level," present words in related groups. Examples: Present words about feelings, and make a poster with the students, with different words to describe being "afraid" or "happy." Students can discuss the degrees of emotion (is "terrified" more than "nervous" or "anxious," "ecstatic" better than "pleased"), and the differences between the words (how is "snicker" different from "guffaw," "terrified" different from "horrified?"). Another option is to study word parts: have the students learn that 'ject' means 'throw,' and then tackle "projectile," "reject" and "trajectory." (See the word parts section of the resource room for some activities.) An advantage to grouping words this way is that it lends itself to individualized instruction. Students can all be tackling words from the big "ject" list - but one student may be learning "subjective" and "abject" while another learns "project" and "projectile." (As with any strategy that differentiates between students, you will need to deal with the 'why is he doing something different' issues and determining how and how much to differentiate - but with these activities the differences between students are not as obvious. ) Incorporate multisensory learning from the beginning. Many students gain a lot if an illustration or demonstration is presented first. Later, when the word is used or its meaning discussed, they have an image to associate it with, and are more likely to learn from the discussion as well as from the visual presentations. Model the activities first. Demonstrate these activities with vivid, familiar words first. Once you've modeled an activity with a word, do it with student input next, and finally, have the students do it on their own - perhaps in groups before working individually. Most work with vocabulary should be done with the meanings available. If the activity involves expressing the ideas in a different form than the definition, then the student has to think about the meaning and interpret it. If the student doesn't use the right meaning, they're worse than wasting they're time; they're learning the wrong things. In addition, students may commit a simplified meaning to memory, but if they have a more developed definition they will be able to think about that and use it. Keep an ongoing list prominently posted.If the words are visible and accessible to students, they are more likely to see them, think about them, and use them. It's up to you to remember to take the lists down when you give tests or quizzes, unless you are using word banks already. (Don't rely on a list on the board as a word bank, however; some students have significantly more trouble reading or writing from a distance than from the paper they are working on.) If you've got different students learning different words, put them all up there, but be sure each student knows which words s/he is responsible for knowing. Go beyond the definitions of the words.Include the connotations of the words and the ways they are most likely to be used. Don't limit this exploration to the "discussion" of words. When students are drawing or acting out words, encourage them to incorporate the connotations or the more subtle aspects of the meanings of the words.
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Illustrate the words. Show pictures or video clips that demonstrate the meaning of a word. Have students draw and label something illustrating the meaing of the word.This is not limited to concrete nouns -- a grim expression, a contemplative person or absurd conduct can also be drawn. The labels explain how the word and drawing fit. Drawing skills are not importat; stick figures with accurate labels can succinctly express an idea as well as finely crafted caricatures. The infamous "flashcards" can be made more meaningful with illustrations, as well. Be sure, though, that the student doesn't replace an abstract idea with a concrete example of it. This can be done by showing different ways that the idea is expressed and having hte students discover what makes them valid illustrations -- for instance, could news be grim?How? Play "Quick Draw."This doesn't have to be competitive, but it can be. See how quickly students can convey the essence of a words meaning on the board -- without words. This works especially well with words describing visual concepts, like many geography terms. Again, make sure students don't oversimplify things -- if you play this game repeatedly, make sure the students are using different ways to draw the words. Play "vocabulary charades." Have students draw a word from a hat and act it out. Give credit for finding the word used in the real world. Provide extra credit if a student hears or sees a vocabulary word anywhere outside of the vocabulary exercises. To get the points, the student has to write down the word, what it means, and where s/he heard it. Sometimes the students will purposely use the words so someone can say they heard it -- which just means they are incorporating it into their oral vocabularies. Use the words yourself. That prominently posted list can be your cue to slip words into other classwork or discussions. Students may not even need the incentive of extra credit to start listening for them. Have students answer questions that use the words. For example: "What are three ways you could tell a person had just received grim news?" "What are three things an impertinent person might say?" "What are three things that would disconcert you?" Doing this while the student has the meaning available gives the opportunity to process the meaning instead of guessing at an answer. Have students generate examples and non-examples for words. This can be done with visual or kinesthetic illustrations as well as verbal descriptions. Have students explain whether something is a good example of of a word or not, and why they think so. For most groups, this activity should be practiced with familiar, concrete words first. It can be used to lay a solid foundation for "comparing and contrasting" and defending ideas in essays, especially if you encourage the students to use precise langauge and good sentences. When you ask students to generate examples, if someone comes up with a "wrong" answer, it can be used as "a good non-example" to help clarify the meaning of a word. Remind students that learning is not about proving what you already know, but about asking questions to change what you don't know into what you do know. Use "fill in the blank" exercises before you expect the students to use the words in sentences themselves.This is also a good way to test students, or to make the transition between working with the definitions available and recalling what the words mean on their own. Have a word bank with five vocabulary words and five sentences with blanks, and have the students decide which word goes in which blank. Your challenge will be constructing sentences which only match with one word, so small groups of words are better. These exercises are also opportunities for you to give a wider scope to a word, and discuss how that word fits into a sentence that the students might not have considered. Compose with the words. Only after a student has heard and read a word used correctly many times should s/he be expected to compose something original with the word. This can be a fun class activity, though, once a sizable list has accumulated. Students can take turns picking words from the list to add a sentence to an ongoing story - students will get a chance to hear the words they weren't sure of used by other students, and the sentences can be revised if the words are not used correctly. Eventually, students may enjoy composing absurd tales using the words. |
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