Kids need to learn about 40,000-50,000 words by the time
they graduate high school. Traditional approaches to vocabulary instruction
(listing, looking up, defining, writing in a sentence) have proven to be unsuccessful,
but even if this instruction were perfectly successful children would fall far
short of the number of words they needed to know by the end of their K-12
schooling. It is readily apparent that children must learn most of their words
incidentally, in conversation with their teachers, parents and peers and
through reading and being read to.
While this learning may be incidental, it does not mean that
it cannot be fostered in the classroom. What children need to develop is a word consciousness, an awareness of and curiosity
about words that will motivate the learning of new words. Teachers have a huge
role to play in developing this consciousness.
Many years ago I wrote a group of poems to help students
develop reading fluency and awareness of word families and spelling. One thing
I did with these poems was use some sophisticated vocabulary, some words that
would not be found in a first or second graders’ vocabulary. I viewed it as an
opportunity to stretch kids’ vocabulary in a meaningful context. Here is an
example:
Crocodile
Isle
On a trip to a tropic isle,
I encountered a crocodile,
With jagged teeth, a crooked smile.
We sat down to talk awhile.
He proved to be quite versatile,
And told me stories with great style
Of pleasant trips along the Nile
When he was just a juvenile.
So if you should meet a crocodile
Remember they’re not mean or vile.
Have a nice chat, but all the while
Keep your distance – about a mile.
(from Snack
Attack and Other Poems)
Obviously,
the target pattern is –ile words
(and one sound alike, isle), but I
want to call attention to words like versatile,
juvenile and vile. These words
would be challenging for most six and seven-year olds, but I included them, not
just because they fit the pattern, but also because they provided an
opportunity to talk about the words with the children in a real context and
stretch their vocabulary.
Since
the poem was first presented to the students as a read aloud followed by
discussion of the meaning, I had plenty of opportunity to scaffold their
understanding of these new words. Further, though these were new words, they were
words for which students already had a concept, so I could hook these
words onto a familiar concept. For example, the students already had a concept
of “child” and “young”, so I could talk about the word “juvenile” and help them
add this word to their growing concept of “youth.”
In
this way, and in many other ways, teachers can help students develop a
curiosity about words and an awareness of how words work and how they are
interrelated. This curiosity and awareness has been called word consciousness.
In a very helpful article in The Reading Teacher, entitled “For the Love of Words: Fostering
Word Consciousness in Young Readers” (Volume 62, Issue 3, 2011), Graves and
Watts-Taffe offer a framework for developing word consciousness in the
classroom. The framework has six categories as follows:
1. Create a rich word environment – What are
the words that students see in the classroom environment (word walls, anchor
charts, etc.), read in a variety of texts in the classroom library, hear spoken
by the teacher and other students, and ultimately use in their own speaking and
writing?
2. Recognize
and promote adept diction – Diction, in this case is precision in the choice of
words. Graves and Watts-Taffe recommend that one way to develop adept diction
is through repeated read alouds and direct discussion of words encountered in
the read aloud and how they can be used by students. I wrote about the read
aloud/vocabulary connection in this
post.
3. Promote Word Play – Stock the room with
commercially available word games as well as games that teachers can make and
use in word based literacy centers.
4. Foster Word Consciousness in Writing –
Discussion around the best word choices makes for powerful writing instruction
and helps to develop word consciousness. For example, a mini-lesson on powerful
verbs can show students how the right word choice can bring power and clarity
to their writing. “The car sped down the road” is more descriptive and
clearer than “The car went down the
road.”
5. Involve students in word investigations
– Students might be interested in investigating the special vocabulary used by
certain professions, or the derivation of slang expressions or new words that
have entered our language in the last decade.
6.
Teach
Students About Words – Teachers should take every opportunity to model
their own word consciousness by directly teaching kids about words. When students
encounter the word “sign” in their reading, I might ask them why the “g” in “sign”
is silent. This gives me an opportunity to talk about how “sign” is related to “signal”
and that we keep the “g” in “sign” even though we don’t pronounce it, to make
sure that the reader understands the meaning. This can then lead to a
discussion of all sorts of words – signature,
assignment, signage, assignation, signatory, signet, significance, signify,
sign language.
Graves and Watts-Taffe recommend that when discussing words
with children the teacher should
1. Explain
the meaning of the new word (or have another student explain it).
2. Extend
the meaning of the word by providing examples.
3. Engage
students with the word by helping them to make connections with their own
experiences.
Another very useful article on the topic, also from The Reading Teacher is “The
Vocabulary-Rich Classroom: Modeling Sophisticated Word Use to Promote Word
Consciousness and Vocabulary Growth” by Lane and Allen (Volume 63, Issue 5,
2011). The authors offer a model of how to expand student word consciousness through
the various activities of the Morning Meeting. The authors say “[p]romoting
incidental learning and word consciousness through frequent and deliberate
modeling of sophisticated vocabulary can add substantial breadth to students’
vocabularies.”
Words are endlessly fascinating things. Martin Luther King
used his special way with words as the platform for a movement that changed the
world (I have a dream). So did Abraham Lincoln (of the people, for the people,
by the people) and Franklin Roosevelt (nothing to fear, but fear itself) and
John F. Kennedy (ask not what your country can do for you). As teachers we need
to foster our own love and fascination with words and we must share that love
with our students and thoughtfully and systematically nurture their own word consciousness.
In this way we set the stage for the development of the rich vocabulary that is
so necessary for our students’ academic, social and professional success.