1 / 18

Developing High-Level Vocabulary

Developing High-Level Vocabulary. Through Fine Art Images, Photos, and Illustrations By Barbara Place. For More Information.

elan
Télécharger la présentation

Developing High-Level Vocabulary

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Developing High-Level Vocabulary Through Fine Art Images, Photos, and Illustrations By Barbara Place

  2. For More Information • Please contact Barbara Place at bplace01@me.com if you would like any further information. This website can not hold my complete PowerPoint with all of the fine art images and images of real-world photos, but I’d be happy to send the PowerPoint to any people who are interested in my complete presentation.

  3. Topics • Key Research Findings • High-level Vocabulary • Why Images Are So Powerful • Practical Tips and Strategies • Research Findings on Method

  4. Key Research Findings • Vocabulary is the single biggest predictor of comprehension. • Oral language experiences are the most powerful way to develop vocabulary.

  5. Vocabulary Differences by age 3 • Higher SES: 30 million words/1,100 words • Working class homes: 20 million words/700 words • Lower SES: 10 million words/500 words

  6. Key Cognitive Research Findings • Rare, sophisticated words • Decontextualized Talk

  7. High-Level Vocabulary • Beyond High-Frequency Words • Academic Vocabulary • Tier 2 Vocabulary • Robust or Sophisticated Vocabulary • Rare Words

  8. Types of Vocabulary Words • Tier 1 • Tier 2 • Tier 3

  9. Why images are so powerful? • Low threshold for student entry • Neurological support for remembering vocabulary • Allows primary grade students to expand vocabulary • Provides practice with using “evidence” to support opinions

  10. The Power of Images • Our brains associate information with our five senses • Our brains are designed to catch visual information quickly

  11. Practical Tips and Strategies • Routine • Selecting Vocabulary • Connecting Vocabulary to Images • Involving All Students • Reviewing Previously Learned Vocabulary

  12. Routine • Open-ended Discussion • Introduction of vocabulary in context sentences • Repetition of new vocabulary • Repetition of previously learned vocabulary • Quick review of target vocabulary

  13. Selecting Vocabulary • Generative Words (prefixes, suffixes, and root words) • Instructional Potential (interact, elaborate, colossal, congested, inhabitant, masterpiece) • Conceptual Understanding (impenetrable, innovate, nostaligia)

  14. Connecting Vocabulary to Images • Memorable Words • Images that expand students’ prior knowledge • FOCUS ON MEANING

  15. Involving All Students • Introduce words in a context sentence • Have all students repeat the word or sentence • Thumbs up or thumbs down questions • Yes or no questions • Either-or questions • Provide open-ended questions about the images

  16. Reviewing Vocabulary • Keep a list of vocabulary • Include natural opportunities for students to use the word. • Provide sentence frames

  17. Additional Gains • Student Engagement • Student Confidence

  18. Research Findings • Retention of target vocabulary • Improved comprehension • Improved ability to use context clues • Improved overall vocabulary

More Related