Vocabulary Development in the Content Area Using a Strategic Plan for Vocabulary Development to Increase Student Achievement Presented by Dr. Dorian Giorgio
Vocabulary Development in the Content Area
Using a Strategic Plan for Vocabulary Development to Increase Student Achievement
Presented by Dr. Dorian Giorgio
Ice Breaker
Using the laminated cards and tacky create a poster that shows how you teach math vocabulary with your class
Pick a partner to share Note what you have in common Did you use all the same cards? Share
with your table.
Agenda
Research Review –
Why Focus on Vocabulary?
How Does the Brain Learn and Remember Vocabulary?
Types of Vocabulary
Marzano’s 6-Step Process for Developing Vocabulary
Designing a Strategic Plan for Vocabulary Development in 2015-2016
Share Out
By the end of the session
You will: Understand the characteristics of effective
vocabulary
instruction, and
Apply a six-step process for direct instruction in
vocabulary.
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Vocabulary Development ResearchMarzano and Sims (2013)
Children from low economic families develop less working vocabulary
Children from higher SES homes have more language-learning experiences
Language development gap increases over time
Children develop vocabulary by socializing with important people in their lives
Three Areas Affected by Low Vocabulary DevelopmentMarzano and Sims (2013)
Reading Ability
Independent Reading
Mental Processes
Types of Vocabulary
Tier 1 words
Developed through conversation, reading and daily experiences
May need support for ELL students and students from low SES environment
Tier 2 words
General academic or literary words
Need to be developed as they are encountered and during vocabulary lessons
Tier 3 words
Domain specific words
Must be systematically developed during content instruction
Process of Vocabulary DevelopmentAdapted from Marzano and Sims (2013)
New
Even a little time spent on vocabulary development can enrich learners!
Discussion Starters for Types of WordTypes Key Feature Questions
People(author, character, villain, narrator, guest speaker, host, hostess, film director, political cartoonist)
What actions does this kind of person perform? What is required to become this kind of person? What physical or psychological characteristics does this kind of person have?
Events(play, interview, simulation, chance event)
What people are associated with this kind of event?What process or actions are associated with this kind of event?
What equipment, materials, resources, or contexts are associated with this kind of event?
What setting is associated with this kind of event? What causes and consequences are associated with this kind of event?
Intellectual, artistic, or cognitive products(essay, argument, tessellation, proof, model)
What process is associated with this kind of product? What purpose is associated with this kind of product? What people is associated with this kind of product? What equipment is associated with this kind of product?
Mental actions(revise, edit, reflect, problem solve, prove)
What process is associated with this kind of mental action? What people are associated with this kind of mental action? What location is associated with this kind of mental action? What causes or consequences are associated with this kind of mental action?
Social/societal groups, institutions, or organizations(audience, Modern Language Association, American Psychological Association, control group, representative, sample population)
What purpose is associated with this kind of group, institution, or organization?
What people are associated with this kind of group, institution, or organization?
What setting is associated with this kind of group, institution, or organization?
Shapes/direction/position(order of events, introduction, conclusion, polygon, coordinate plane, circumference, data distribution)
What physical features are associated with this kind of shape, direction, or position?
What uses are associated with this kind of shape, direction, or position? What reference points are associated with this kind of shape, direction, or
position?Quantities/amounts/measurements(time frame, pacing, Roman numeral, cardinal number, greater than, function)
What relationships are associated with this kind of quantity, amount or measurement?
What referents are associated with this kind of quantity, amount or measurement?
How we Remember
Logogens use words
Imagens use pictures
Logogens and Imagens combine to provide meaning
Sights, sounds, smells, and emotions provide stimulus to remember what we learn
Students need to engage is social learning experiences to create these memories
Vocabulary Notebooks
Provide learning activities for students to explore new terms
Provide student choice in representing new terms Combine steps 2 and 3 in one activity Provide an opportunity to share and reflect with
classmates Provide students with a reference material for use
during mathematics
Pick one vocabulary organizer
Pick a term from “horizontal”, “square” or “thousand”
Write a definition for the term in your own words on the organizer.
Create an image to represent the term on the organizer.
Complete One Vocabulary Organizer
Step 4
Engage students periodically in activities that help them add to their knowledge of the terms in their vocabulary notebooks
Choose two words from word list and complete a Connect Two.
Line
Line Segment
Point
Polygon
Vertex
Perimeter
Area
Angle
Right Angle
Ray
Two-Dimensional
Three-Dimensional
Length
Width
Closed Figure
Plane Figure
Rectangle
Square
Circle
Choose one word and complete the Examples and Non-examples Organizer
Line
Line Segment
Point
Polygon
Vertex
Perimeter
Area
Angle
Right Angle
Ray
Two-Dimensional
Three-Dimensional
Length
Width
Closed Figure
Plane Figure
Rectangle
Square
Circle
Discourse TimeTaken from Discourse Time! Developing the Argumentative Literacy in the Math Classroom by David Singer (2007)
Small group discussion used to solve a problem while an outside group of equal size monitors and scores
Problem should not necessarily have a clear right or wrong answer
Problem should not be given to students to solve on their own
Problem should include previously taught vocabulary terms
Students use their vocabulary notebooks to support their thinking
Use a set scoring system
Sit scorers outside the group and across from the person they are scoring
Discourse Time Scoring Suggestions
State an opinion relevant to the problem (1 point)
Draws another person into the discussion (1 point)
Makes a connection – does not need to be math based (1 point)
Supports an opinion with factual evidence (1 point)
Asks a question that moves the discussion – pushes the group’s thinking (2 points)
Proves some else's opinion with evidence (2 points)
Uses term from vocabulary notebook correctly (2 points)
Takes away from value of D. T. (-1 point)
Sample Discourse Problem
In a two-boat sailing race, one boat, Windsprite, rounds the final buoy and sails straight for the finish line at 12.0 knots. Exactly 4 minutes after Windsprite rounds the final buoy, the other boat, Porpoise, reaches that point and heads for the finish line at 12.7 knots. Windsprite reaches the finish line 49 minutes after rounding the last buoy. Who wins the race? Why?
Windsprite Porpoise
Step 6
Involve students periodically in games that allow them to play with terms Pictionary
Memory
Jeopardy
Charades
Name that Category
Bingo
Working with ESL Students
Step 1 (ESL): Provide a description, explanation, or example of the new term (along with a nonlinguistic representation).
Step 2 (ESL): Ask students to restate the description, explanation, or example in their own words in their own language.
Step 3 (ESL): Ask students to construct a picture, symbol or graphic representing the term or phrase. Students should create their own representation and not copy yours from Step 1.
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Working with ESL Students
Step 4 (ESL): Engage students periodically in activities that help them add to their knowledge of the terms in their notebook. Allow students to use their native language as much as possible.
Step 5 (ESL): Periodically ask students to discuss the terms with one another. Pair students of the same language together.
Step 6 (ESL): Involve students periodically in games that allow them to play with terms. Pair students of the same language together.
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Using a Word Walltaken from https://www.choiceliteracy.com/articles-detail-view.php?id=1329
Add three to five high frequency words each week
Introduce them with fanfare
Have a brief, whole-group word wall activity every day
Use an area of the classroom where the students can see the words and may be working on activities that engage those words
Don’t forget to have a “retirement party” for words that the students have mastered, and remove mastered words
Vocabulary for Common Core Standards Word Wall cards arranged by grade level found at http://www.ncesd.org/Page/983
Create a strategic plan
Develop a list of terms
1, 2, 3 terms per week for 30 weeks to teach target terms.
Develop a weekly or unit plan for when and how each step in the 6 step plan will be included in lessons
Encourage students to add information to vocabulary notebooks after working with terms on other learning activities
Develop an assessment strategy
Must include all 6 Steps
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Example of Typical Two-Week Period
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Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Provide schema for new term. Students will discuss and write understanding. (Steps 1-2)
Vocabulary game played right before lunch period. (Step 6)
Create nonlinguistic representation. (Step 3)
Comparison Activity (Step 4)
Vocabulary game played at end of day. (Step 6)
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Provide schema for new term. Students will discuss and write understanding. (Steps 1-2)
Vocabulary game played right before lunch. (Step 6)
Create nonlinguistic representation. (Step 3)
Think-Pair-Share Activity (Step 5)
Comparison Activity (Step 4)
Lessons Learned – From Kimberly Tyson at
http://www.learningunlimitedllc.com/2012/12/marzanos-6-step-vocabulary-process/
As a teacher, you can’t teach every word which is why students also need to be engaged in independent reading to build their vocabulary. However, for targeted words that are key to mastering content or comprehending text, you should try implementing the six-step process.
Since Marzano’s six-step process has been around a number of years, he reports several “lessons learned.” Keep these in mind as you implement the six-step process:
The process works best when you don’t skip any steps. Don’t pick and choose which step you “like” best – do all 6 steps.
Students need to generate their own definition of a term – sometimes I call this a “kid friendly” definition.
Step 3 – the nonlinguistic definition – is a powerful and important step. When students visualize, create a pictogram, or act out a word, they learn it well and achievement soars.
Games – Step 6 – help students play with words and internalize word meanings in a non-threatening atmosphere.
Your 6 Step Strategic Plan
Use the planning tools in your handout to work with your colleagues to develop your classroom plan.
Determine when/how for each unit of instruction you will complete each of the 6 steps
Will you need a weekly schedule?
Will you add mathematical terms to other vocabulary instruction?
Will you use a vocabulary notebook that includes all vocabulary or design one just for mathematics?
What will be the layout for the notebook?
What assessment strategies will you use and how can they be used formatively?
Marzano’s 6-Step Process for Vocabulary Instruction
Step 1 – Describe – Provide students with a description, explanation or example (not a definition) using common language • Determine prior knowledge • What do you think you know about this term? • Use imagery
Step 2 – Restate – Students restate the description, explanation or example in their own words • Discuss with a partner • Student record (notebook or journal)
Step 3 – Representations - Students represent the term non-linguistically • Graphic representation illustrating process • Draw the thing • Draw a symbol • Dramatize the term • Student record (notebook or journal)
Step 4 – Activities – Engage students periodically in activities that add to their knowledge of the terms • Identify synonyms or antonyms • List related words • Write reminders of common confusions • Draw an additional graphic • Write metaphors and analogies • Compare terms • Classify terms • Student record (notebook or journal)
Step 5 – Discuss – Ask students to discuss terms with each other • Think-Pair-Share about targeted terms • 2 minute vocabulary BUZZ • Add to or revise student record (notebook or journal)
Step 6 – Games - Play games with your terms • Jeopardy • Pyramid • I have, who has? Marzano (2004)