red 4519 chapter 7- vocabulary dr. michelle kelley diagnostic & corrective reading

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RED 4519 RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

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Page 1: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

RED 4519RED 4519

Chapter 7- VocabularyChapter 7- Vocabulary

Dr. Michelle KelleyDr. Michelle Kelley

Diagnostic & CorrectiveReading

Page 2: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

What is Vocabulary?What is Vocabulary?

Listening

Speaking

Reading

Writing

Page 3: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Why is Vocabulary Important?Why is Vocabulary Important?

Vocabulary allows us to communicate

Research suggests students’ knowledge of words is the single greatest predictor of comprehension.

Students with a strong vocabulary perform better on standardized tests (Anderson study)

Page 4: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Environment is CriticalEnvironment is Critical

Hart & Risley (2003) found that by

the age of 3 children from high income families knew 30 million more words than students from poverty.

What are the implications as kids enter school? How about beyond?

Page 5: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

So, How Did You Learn Vocabulary?So, How Did You Learn Vocabulary?

Life Experiences- p. 154◦ Discussing (talking)◦ Reading◦ Writing

Vicarious experiences – p. 155 (videos, TV, movies, CD-ROMs, Internet, books, etc.)

Explicit Instruction- p. 156

Page 6: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Explicit Instruction p. 156 Explicit Instruction p. 156

1. Selectively choose words.2. Give students multiple exposure to

words, including pronunciation.3. Teach students how to use context

clues, word parts & morphemic analysis.

4. Use graphic organizers and maps.5. Teach multiple meaning words.

Flynt & Brozo, 2008

Page 7: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Other Considerations When Teaching Other Considerations When Teaching VocabularyVocabulary

Provide Time for Reading- Don’t throw out independent reading

Context Lessons- Figure 7.1, p. 157Tools for Success- other resources (Franklin,

thesaurus, glossaries…)Explicit instruction- including language

concepts Figure 7.2, p. 158Word Play- have fun, use literature Figure

7.3, p. 159

Page 8: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Pass the ChocolatePass the ChocolateUsing page 31 of handout.

Page 9: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Teaching Word PartsTeaching Word Parts

Miscreant- write this word at the top of page 32 handout GO.

What does this word mean?Why do you think that way?

Write the following sentence.

The miscreant stole the stole the jewels.

Page 10: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Context and StructureContext and StructureWhat is the prefix for this word?

misWhat words do we know with this

prefix?What is the suffix?

antWhat words do we know with this

suffix?

Page 11: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

51 % of prefixed words 51 % of prefixed words include:include:dis- not, do the opposite

in-, im- in, into or not

re- again or back

un- not, the opposite of

Page 12: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Caution!Caution!Not all multisyllabic words are

prefixed.

For example, uncle and invented.

Page 13: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Read the following passage to a partner.

The boys arrows were nearly gone so they sat down on the grass and stopped hunting. Over at the edge of the woods they saw Henry making a bow to a little girl who was coming down the road. She had tears in her dress and also tears in her eyes. She gave Henry a note which he brought over to the group of young hunters. Read to the boys, it caused great excitement. After a minute but rapid examination of their weapons, they ran down the valley. Does were standing at the edge of the lake making an excellent target.(Buswell, G. T. (1920). An experimental study of eye-voice span in reading. Supplementary Education Monographs. No. 17.)

Page 14: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

What happened while you read?What happened while you read?

Reread (laughed- went back) Read on/ahead Paused Self-corrected Refered to context Used meaning Homographs (words spelled the

same)/Homophones(words that sound the same)- anticipating multiple meaning words (homonyms)

Page 15: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Other Considerations During Direct Instruction

Idiomatic expressions are also difficult for students, especially ESOL students.

Examples:◦ It’s raining cats and dogs.◦ Put your best foot forward.◦ Off the wall. ◦ Walking on eggshells.◦ Under the weather.

Page 16: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Assessment of VocabularyAssessment of Vocabulary

Informal Assessment (p. 161)

◦ Cloze tests (p. 161)

◦ Maze tests (p. 161)

◦ Zip tests (p. 161)

Formal Assessment (p. 162)

◦ Standardized achievement tests◦ Group diagnostic tests- Gates-MacGinitie

◦ DRP, SRI

Page 17: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Example: Cloze Example: Cloze

Students are given a sentence or passage with a word or words missing. The student provides the word(s).

My mother and ___ will be going shopping for _________. We need milk ____ eggs.

Page 18: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Example: MazeExample: Maze

Students are given a sentence or passage with a word or words missing. The student provides the word(s) from a set of given words.I am so excited (too, which, that) I am getting a puppy. My (dad, hat, job) said I will have to walk him every (year, day, century).

Page 19: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Example: Zip (Need to Example: Zip (Need to scan in)scan in)

Page 20: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

Activities to Support Vocabulary

Predict-o-gram (p. 163)

Vocabulary Bookmark (p. 163)

Synonym/Definition Concentration (p. 169)

Scattergory (p. 170)

Multiple Meaning Race Track (p. 171)

Hink Pinks (p. 171)

Page 21: RED 4519 Chapter 7- Vocabulary Dr. Michelle Kelley Diagnostic & Corrective Reading

HomeworkHomeworkRead chapter 10 on Fluency.

Complete the Anticipation Guide for Fluency- page 33 of your handout and bring it to next class.