Can you imagine being a Newcomer, or having been in the United States for a few years and hearing several different terms for essentially the same thing. An example might be: (5 take away 4 is 1) then the next year you learn (5 minus 4 equals 1), or maybe it is the same year just in different classes (pullouts, specials etc.). I know to some this seems minor, but when you are learning a new language, or you are a slow learner, it becomes jumbled in your brain. We need to teach the correct terms so that the struggling student can learn it correctly the first time. It is ok when explaining a new term to use words that the student can relate to in order to build upon their background knowledge, however we need to quickly introduce the proper vocabulary.
Academic Vocabulary words are broken into three tiers. Classrooms may have a word wall for each tier, however our district has defined the Academic Word Wall to consist of Tier II and Tier III words. Words that a student may not use in everyday language, words that are specific to a subject area. These words can be found on the OSDE website by following this link. Our district also has stated academic vocabulary words should be placed on the word wall as the word is introduced and taught.
Academic Vocabulary words are broken into three tiers. Classrooms may have a word wall for each tier, however our district has defined the Academic Word Wall to consist of Tier II and Tier III words. Words that a student may not use in everyday language, words that are specific to a subject area. These words can be found on the OSDE website by following this link. Our district also has stated academic vocabulary words should be placed on the word wall as the word is introduced and taught.
Having a place for students to keep Academic Vocabulary words so that they can refer back to them as needed is important too. A few ideas are: using the Marzano Method (write, define, illustrate) in a notebook; have an ongoing Interactive Notebook. Interactive Word Walls are also important in a classroom, you may have two or three going at a time.
Revisiting Academic Vocabulary in a center, or even a whole class game, after explicitly teaching them, is a wonderful way to review. Using SeeSaw to define or illustrate a word would be a way that parents can see the words the students are learning, or using an app such as Tellagami to build a character then define a word from the Academic Word Wall. Playing Bingo or Password would be two whole class ways to review. Students learn by doing, hands on activities will make academic words concrete.
In what ways are you teaching Tier II and Tier III Academic Vocabulary words in your classroom? Share at least one idea below (by September 6th at 8:00am) to enter your name into a drawing for this awesome Pineapple Giveaway package:
Book: Stand Tall Molly Lou Melon
Posters
Pencil Pouch
Classroom Awards
Classroom Bookmarks
Stickers
Notebook
Please reach out to me if I can assist, clarify, collaborate, or answer any questions about Academic Word Walls.
Teachingly,
Stephanie Hime
stephanie.hime@cpsreds.org
Extension 2002
https://hime.youcanbook.me
In what ways are you teaching Tier II and Tier III Academic Vocabulary words in your classroom? Share at least one idea below (by September 6th at 8:00am) to enter your name into a drawing for this awesome Pineapple Giveaway package:
Book: Stand Tall Molly Lou Melon
Posters
Pencil Pouch
Classroom Awards
Classroom Bookmarks
Stickers
Notebook
Please reach out to me if I can assist, clarify, collaborate, or answer any questions about Academic Word Walls.
Teachingly,
Stephanie Hime
stephanie.hime@cpsreds.org
Extension 2002
https://hime.youcanbook.me