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Coweta Committed to Student Success Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Building Academic Academic Vocabulary Vocabulary

Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

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Page 1: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Coweta Committed to Student SuccessCoweta Committed to Student Success

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Building Academic Building Academic VocabularyVocabulary

Page 2: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Systematic Approach

“Teaching specific terms in a specific way is probably the strongest action a teacher can take to ensure that students have the academic background knowledge they need to understand the content they will encounter in school.”

― Marzano and Pickering

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Page 3: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Systematic Approach “When all teachers in a school focus on the

same academic vocabulary and teach in the same way, the school has a powerful comprehensive approach.”

“When all teachers in a district embrace and use the same comprehensive approach, it becomes even more powerful.”

― Marzano and Pickering

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Page 4: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Research Findings• A student in the 50th percentile in terms of

ability to comprehend the subject matter taught in school, with no direct vocabulary instruction, remains at the 50th percentile.

• The same student after specific content-area terms have been taught in a specific way, increases to the 83rd percentile.

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Page 5: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Background Knowledge• Instruction in specific content-area terms

builds a student’s background knowledge in the content area.

• Students who understand content in the new state math standards document regarding fractions have an understanding of terms such as numerator, denominator, part, whole, equivalent and so on.

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Page 6: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Do the Math1. Reading 14 minutes a day means reading

over 1,000,000 words a year.

2. Preschool or children’s books expose us to more challenging vocabulary than do prime-time adult TV shows.

3. Math vocabulary can be learned through reading, talking, and playing games.

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Page 7: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Teaching New Terms6-step process– First three steps: Introduce and develop initial

understanding– Next three steps: Multiple exposure to shape

and sharpen understanding

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Page 8: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Step 1• Provide a description, explanation, or example

of the new term.• Strategies:− Direct experiences− Tell a story− Use a video− Individual or small group does investigation and

presents to class− Current events− Mental pictures− Find or create pictures

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Page 9: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Step 2• Students restate description, explanation, or

example in their own words.• Strategies:– Academic Notebook– Math Term – Math Vocabulary (Frayer Model)

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Page 10: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Step 3• Students construct a picture, symbol, or

graphic representing the term.• Strategies:– Create math stories using pictures– Model, model, model– Use space in Academic Notebook for pictures (non-

linguistic representations)– Search internet for representations

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Page 11: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Step 4• Engage students periodically in activities that

help them add to their knowledge of the terms.

• Strategies:– Explicit focused review– Add to and revise Academic Notebook– Find examples and non-examples– List related words– Discuss common confusions/errors– Translate into another language– Discuss words with multiple meanings 11

Page 12: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Step 5• Periodically ask students to discuss the terms

with one another.• Strategies:– Think-Pair-Share

o Think time to review term in Academic Notebooko Pair to discuss and explain to each othero Share with whole class “aha’s”

– Monitor student discussions “listen to children’s voices”– Compare activities

o “Compare 3” and “Similarities and Differences”12

Page 13: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

Step 6• Involve students in games that allow them to play

with terms.• Strategies:– Vocabulary Charades

o Use arms, legs, and bodies to show the meaning of terms like radius, diameter, circumference (individual or in teams)

– Talk a Mile a Minuteo “Talker” given list of words in a category such as shapes. Gets

team to say each word by quickly describing them.– Draw Me

o Patterned after Pictionary– Name that Category

o Patterned after $100,000 Pyramid13

Page 14: Coweta Committed to Student Success 1 Building Academic Vocabulary

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“Given the relationship between academic background knowledge and academic achievement, one can make the case that it should be at the top of any list of intervention intended to enhance student achievement.”

― Marzano and Pickering