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Wiki creation Vocabulary information and strategies Vocabulary work on Text Set Project EQs- How can a web based resource for content reading support my teaching? How can vocabulary instruction improve student comprehension of subject matter?
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‘Vocabulary is the most important influence on reading comprehension.’ Marlene Asselin (2002)
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Vocabulary development increases when students have visual images of word meaning and when the words are categorized into groups. In order to understand spoken or written words a student must know 95% of the words. It takes a minimum of 15 encounters with a new word for a student to understand and apply the word independently.
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Choose words for instruction carefully, focusing on words that are critical for understanding core content. Access students’ prior knowledge through discussion, comparing/contrasting, examples and non-examples. Multiple exposures are required before a word enters long-term memory.
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Model and teach students word learning strategies that they can use independently. ◦ Teach students to evaluate their understanding of words they read and hear, and to ask questions. ◦ Teach and model dictionary use using ‘think-alouds’ and discussion of how to choose the most appropriate definition. ◦ Teach use of contextual cues to predict word meanings. ◦ Teach students that some common word parts are important to word meanings. ◦ Vocabulary in content subjects is dense in words with Greek or Latin roots, prefixes and suffixes. For example, understanding the meaning of prefixes like pre-, post-, pro-, anti-, bio- can contribute to understanding the large number of words that are built from these prefixes. ◦ Many dictionaries, including the ‘Longman Dictionary of American English’, include lists of prefixes and suffixes and their meanings.
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Students write definitions based on dictionaries or other sources/formats in words they understand. Generate a sentence using the word. Word maps (a graphic representation that includes ‘What is it?, What is it like?, What are some examples?’) are an alternative or supplement to traditional dictionary definitions.
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Use contextual information to write the appropriate vocabulary word in a blank in a sentence or paragraph. This exercise can be even more powerful if students create and exchange the test sentences with the blanks, which their partners must fill in. Students can be asked to write an alternate word or synonym that would preserve the same meaning in each context.
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Teacher uses and highlights vocabulary often, and students are required to identify and use vocabulary in reading, writing or class discussion. Teacher selects one or two words from each vocabulary list to lead the class in creating a word web. The word is placed in the center and boxes for two or three categories (e.g. synonyms, types, attributes) are placed around it. Students then join in to contribute and discuss category examples. Students can then be assigned to work in small groups to create a web with another vocabulary word.
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Teacher selects one or two words from each vocabulary list to teach about word parts and their meanings. Example- root ‘port-‘ (transport, import, export, deport) If students understand that the meaning of the root is ‘to carry’, they can use this information to understand and infer relationships between other words with this root. Another example- prefixes ‘anti- and pro’ discuss a web or list of related words that include these prefixes and their meanings.
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Help students understand language and build background…essential to understanding the topic. How: Picture Dictionaries and Word Walls And……………
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http://www.cobbk12.org/cheathamhill/lfs%2 0update/vocabulary%20and%20word%20walls.htm http://www.cobbk12.org/cheathamhill/lfs%2 0update/vocabulary%20and%20word%20walls.htm
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http://youtu.be/VIOqQeJzWQI http://youtu.be/VIOqQeJzWQI
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How does today’s learning relate to previous learning about content reading instruction? What did you learn today?
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