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WEEK 7 TEYL – TEACHING VOCABULARY

WEEK 7 TEYL – TEACHING VOCABULARY. Vocabulary is the most important aspect of language to teach. You can understand a reading text and make yourself understood with almost no grammar at all …but you can’t get anywhere without vocabulary.

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WEEK 7 TEYL – TEACHING VOCABULARY

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  1. WEEK 7 TEYL – TEACHING VOCABULARY

  2. Vocabulary is the most important aspect of language to teach • You can understand a reading text and make yourself understood with almost no grammar at all • …but you can’t get anywhere without vocabulary. • Vocabulary is more important than reading strategies for understanding a text. • Vocabulary is the best measure of proficiency.

  3. Learners need to acquire a large number of lexical items… • They need to understand 98% of a text in order to understand the main gist… • … and in order to guess the rest from context. • This means about 5,000 – 8,000 words • By the end of 6th grade they may know 1000 • So need another 4,000 – 7,000 over the next 6 years… • About 20 – 30 a week

  4. Many of the lexical items learners need to know are ‘chunks’ • ‘Chunks’ are expressions we learn as global units: by the way, I don’t know, never mind, back and forth, in favor of, make a difference • ‘Collocations’ are the way words ‘prefer’ to link with other words: responsible + for, rosy + cheeks, high (not tall) + mountain

  5. Learners can’t acquire enough vocabulary only through incidental encounters • By ‘picking up’ through extensive reading or listening: learners appear to learn one new word per 2,000 read - VERY slow! • So we need deliberate teaching and re-teaching of new items

  6. It’s most important to teach the commonest words • 700 most common words make up 70% of text • Then in order to get up to 85% you need 2,500 (an extra 1,800) • And so on… • It’s vitally important to make sure that the commonest items are mastered, and not to spend too much time and energy on the ones learners are unlikely to encounter very much. • Availability of frequency lists based on corpora. • Frequency list

  7. New items need to be presented fast and efficiently • Inferring from context is highly inefficient… • …as is looking up in the dictionary • The best first encounter is through a quick demonstration of meaning + impact-ful written and spoken forms. • Don’t hang around: save the context-based activities for review.

  8. In order to acquire a word, a learner needs to review it • Probably at least ten times • Common words like there – no problem, likely to come up in texts. • But more advanced words like taste: big problem.

  9. To recap: • Vocabulary is crucially important for language learning. • Learners need to learn a large number of new words and expressions. • Vocabulary has to be deliberately taught. • New items need to be taught efficiently and impact-fully. • Common items have highest priority. • ‘Chunks’ need to be taught as well as single words. • Multiple review of new items is vital.

  10. Don’t our textbooks provide for all this? Sometimes, yes. More often not.

  11. Recommendations: The first step: A checklist

  12. Does your textbook …

  13. If vocabulary lists are inadequate… … then we have to make, or rather supplement, them ourselves Tips: • Keep a list of all the vocabulary you teach the class. • If there aren’t enough items, then add them (from texts, from activities, from incidental sources, even deliberately)

  14. If there aren’t enough ‘chunks’ … then we need to • add them to our lists • draw students’ attention to them Tips : - look out for obvious ‘chunks’ like all over the world, mobile (or c ell-) phone • notice also flexible collocations like …(have/be/turn) on • - when you teach any single word, look out for items that go with it (prepositions after verbs, nouns that go after adjectives etc.) and teach them together (e.g. save + life

  15. If the book doesn’t prioritize useful over less useful items… … then we have to do it ourselves. Use corpora-based frequency lists to help you. Tip: Use Lextutor (But it’s only a tool: We may want to prioritize differently Lextutor doesn’t recognize chunks. )

  16. If the book doesn’t introduce new items efficiently (and they usually don’t…) … then we need to do it. Tips: - Simply write up on the board, and leave there - Use translation to clarify meaning - Use (dramatic/humorous) representations (pictures? icons? mimes? Jokes?) • Or – preferably – both.

  17. Vocabulary Happy: Happy = srećan

  18. If the book doesn’t introduce new items efficiently (and they usually don’t…) … then we need to do it. Tips: - Simply write up on the board, and leave there - Use translation to clarify meaning - Use (dramatic/humorous) representations (pictures? icons? mimes? Jokes?) • Or – preferably – both. • Use mnemonic devices / keywords - Make students write new items in vocabulary notebooks.

  19. If the book doesn’t provide enough review …then we need to supplement Tips: Weekly (bilingual) dictations Cumulative review activities Various techniques:

  20. cellphone life all over the world facts countries location remote areas earthquake the invention of communicate with important events photographs hurricane save lives for example rescue party the outside world

  21. Practical principle: review, don’t test • So don’t ask them to produce the item in response to a picture or definition… • Rather, make them a present of the items, and then tell them to do interesting things with them that will help fix them in their memories.

  22. Tips • (Make up a sentence with an item) • Make up a question • Make up a sentence with at least two of the items • Make up a negative sentence • Make up a true sentence • Make up an obviously untrue sentence • Make up a personal sentence

  23. And more… • Make up a new story that includes all the items Once there was a terrible hurricane ... • Brainstorm (but with full answers): How many remote areas can you think of? What kinds of people travel all over the world? • Quick Bingo • Recall and share

  24. Step 1: Presenting new words

  25. Using visual images

  26. Using gestures and actions • Mime. • Gesture. • Facial expression. • Action. [5]

  27. Showing lexical relations • Synonyms • Antonyms • Collocation

  28. Using concept maps

  29. Words in context • Dialogues. • Role play. • Drama. • Stories. • Songs. • Rhymes & poems. • Videos. [6]

  30. Other techniques • Using a dictionary. • Explaining. • Describing. • Defining the context. • Translating. [7]

  31. Step 2: Helping students remember new words

  32. Using memorizing games and activities • Picture dictation. • Matching words. • Labelling words. • Searching words. • Sequencing words. • Guessing words. • Eliminating words. • Classifying words. [8]

  33. Review Games • Picture labelling. • Crosswords. • Bingo. • Dominoes. • Puzzles. [9]

  34. Step 3: Making sure students make the new words their own

  35. Vocabulary record system • Personal dictionary (word notebooks): • marking word stress, • adding pictures, • putting an L1 translation, • putting the word into context, • adding a synonym, • mapping a word family.

  36. Personalize the new words • Keeping a learning log (blogs). • Keeping a diary (blogs). • Creative writing by using newly-learned words or phrases. • Looking for recently learned words in storybooks, the Internet, the newspapers, etc., and noticing how they are used.

  37. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (1/9) Multiple Choice Activities

  38. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (2/9) True- False Activities.

  39. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (3/9) Cross the odd one out. 1. Which word is different? • flat • house • apartment • beach 2. Which word is different? • desk • briefcase • chair • table 3. Which word is different? • banana • apricot • cherry • sherry 4. Which word is different? • walk • run • sneeze • sprint

  40. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (4/9) • Match.

  41. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (5/9) Taking one more step, we move from ‘pure’ vocabulary exercises, to tasks that enhance learners’ language awareness: • A kind of conscious perception. • Sensitivity to language. • Essentially a thinking process. • Explicit & implicit knowledge about language. • Being aware of the nuances as well as the meaning of language items. • Emphasis on context. • Holistic.

  42. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (6/9) • Multiple -matching

  43. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (7/9)

  44. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (8/9) Using Reading as an impetus for Language Awareness tasks – identifying meaning within context.

  45. Some ideas for Vocabulary Activities (9/9) • Word formation

  46. Online Resources • Teaching Vocabulary:Two Dozen Tips and Techniques • English Vocabulary Word Listswith Games, Puzzles and Quizzes • LearnEnglishKids • An authoring tool: Hot Potatoes

  47. Summary Vocabulary is crucial for our students’ success in English. Many coursebooks do not teach it adequately. It is important for us to be aware of where we may need to provide supplements.

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