Title: A Way With Words: Strategies for Vocabulary Development
1A Way With Words Strategies for Vocabulary
Development
- Created by Lydia H. Soifer, Ph.D.,
- Presented by ESL Department of Pittsburgh Public
Schools
2About Word Learning and Knowledge
- Word consciousness
- A metalinguistic skill
- Word knowledge is complex
- Word learning is incremental
- Words are heterogeneous
- Definitions, context, word parts
- Important
- Inherent limitations
3Vocabulary Knowledge and School Success Some
Connections
- Reading comprehension, decoding, spelling
- School achievement in general
- Builds linguistic awareness
- Enhances world knowledge
- Influences conceptual and inferential reasoning
4Good readers and poor readers
- Good readers
- More efficient phonological representations
- Stronger lexical knowledge
- Poor readers
- Poorer phonological memory
- Slower, less efficient word acquisition
- Greater difficulty retaining and accessing
phonological representations - Decoding difficulty
5The Matthew Effects (Stanovich, 1986)
- Students with word reading difficulties
- Read fewer and easier books
- Have trouble decoding less familiar words
- Learn fewer words through reading
- Show increasing problems in vocabulary and
comprehension
6How many words do we know?
- Average first grader 6,000 words
- Average high school senior 45,000 words
- The Math
- 39,000 words over 12 years
- About 3,000 words a year or 10 words a day
- The range
- 1,000 words a year for low achieving children
- 5,000 words a year for high achieving children
7Model of vocabulary acquisition (Litowitz, 1971)
- Stage 1
- Non-verbal or verbally semantically empty
- Stage 2
- Responds with word associated to original
stimulus word - Stage 3
- Concrete example of experience associated with
the stimulus word - Stage 4
- Demonstrates awareness of definition form
- Stage 5
- Pure definitional form
8Four Stages of Knowing a Word (Dale, 1965)
- Stage 1
- Never saw/heard it before in my life!
- Stage 2
- Heard it, but dont know what it means.
- Stage 3
- I recognize it in context or it has something to
do with - Stage 4
- I know it and can use it properly!
9Qualitative Dimensions of Word Knowledge
(Cronbach, 1942)
- Generalization
- Application
- Breadth
- Precision
- Availability
10Goals of a Lexical Learning Program
- To improve lexical knowledge and flexibility
- To improve word sense
- To improve reading comprehension and written
language - To improve word retrieval
- To develop strategies for vocabulary organization
- To develop a lifelong love of words
11What does it mean to KNOW a word?
- A preliminary definition
- Read/decode a word
- Understand its meaning and use
- Use it in oral response
- Use it in written work
- Levels of word knowledge
- Unknown
- Acquainted
- Established
12Semantic Processes in Reading Comprehension
- Accuracy
- Fluency
- Richness
- Deep Contextualized Knowledge
13Properties of Effective Vocabulary Instruction
- Direct Instruction is most effective
- Integration
- Repetition
- Meaningful Use
14Characteristics of a Word Rich Classroom
- The Classroom
- Clear, physical signs of word awareness
- Word charts or word walls
- Books on words, word play, thesauri, dictionaries
- Labels
- Word games, puzzle books, software
15Characteristics of a Word Rich Classroom
- The Teacher
- Is excited about words and word learning
- Has FUN with words
- Creates word of the day activities
- Children know the teacher loves words
- Understands the difference and connections among
spelling, phonics and vocabulary - Creates the foundation for independence
- Facilitates the use of strategies
16In a Word Rich Classroom
- Foundation for Independence Created
- Students are enthusiastic about words and word
learning - Reading is a part of every day
- Students can identify a preferred word game or
activity - Students have word banks, personal dictionaries
- Thesauri and dictionaries are used frequently
- Students use strategies when facing unknown words
(e.g., word parts, context)
17In a Word Rich Classroom
- Teachers Facilitate Strategy Use
- Models, supports and develops strategies
- Direct, interesting instruction on content area
vocabulary - Uses graphics to show word meanings
- Provides multiple exposures and opportunities to
see, hear, write and use new words - Reading and follow-up discussions of new words
- Encourages word play and motivational activities
18So many words, so little time
- Beck, McKeown Kucan, 2002
- A three tier approach
- Tier one words the most basic
- Tier two words high frequency for mature users
found across a variety of domains - Tier three words low frequency and very
specific - 400 Tier two words a year should do it!
19Questions to ask yourself about WHAT words to
teach and HOW to teach them
- WHAT Words
- Importance to understanding of text
- Degree of prior knowledge
- Frequency of occurrence
- Multiple meaning
- Need for pre-teaching learned from context
- Grouping possibilities
- HOW to teach them
- Incidentally, mediated support, direct
instruction - Facilitate meaningful use in multiple contexts
20Strategies, Techniques and Demonstrations
- Word cemeteries
- Word walls
- Synonym challenges
- Word banks and associated activities
- Predict-o-gram
- Knowledge rating systems
- Exclusionary brainstorming
- Attribute webs
- Semantic continuum
- Word maps
- Concept ladders
- Definition maps
- Context Essential, Text General and Incidental
Word Charts - Label, Group, List Thinking in Categories
21Creating SPARKLE
- Richness of Vocabulary
- Literate Language Style
- Conjunctions
- Elaborated noun phrases
- Mental and linguistic verbs
- Adverbs
22Words for a Literate Lexicon (based on Nippold,
1993)
- Words for technical and curricular activities
- Verbs for cognitive and linguistic processes
- Metacognitive
- Metalinguistic
- Verbs with presuppositional aspects
- Factive
- Non-factive
23A Basic Five Step Approach (Blachewicz, 1986)
- Activate prior knowledge
- Make connections among words and topics
- Use both spoken and written contexts
- Refine and reformulate meanings
- Use the words for writing and additional reading
24Supporting Developing Word Knowledge in the
Classroom
- Repeat in various contexts
- Describe words
- Support with visuals
- Connect to students lives
- Extend meaning with anecdotes
- Make associations
- Give definitions
- Compare and contrasts
- Question
- Chart characteristics
- Rephrase sentences
- Analyze structure
- Provide tactile examples
- Give examples of correct and incorrect use