Teaching Vocabulary.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
What is Word Study? PD Presentation: Union 61 Revised ELA guide Supplement (and beyond)
Advertisements

Interlanguage phonology: Phonological description of what constitute ‘foreign accents’ have been developed. Studies about the reception of such accents.
Teaching/learning Vocabulary
Teaching Vocabulary to advanced students:
Unit 8 Teaching Vocabulary Teaching objectives :  1. know the meaning of knowing a word  2. grasp ways of presenting vocabulary  3. grasp ways of.
Vocabulary. Vocabulary (NRP)  Themes or general categories of effective vocabulary instruction direct and indirect instruction multiple exposures to.
How to Teach Pronunciation
Sultan Agung Islamic University
Stages of Second Language Acquisition
TEACHING GRAMMAR AND VOCABULARY
English Teachers Network Workshop Teaching Grammar June 2009.
Article Summary – EDU 215 Dr. Megan J. Scranton 1.
Getting to know each other. MAAL6018 Vocabulary Teaching And Learning Course Outline Session 1Building blocks and dimensions of vocabulary knowledge.
Year 7 Transition Project. AIMS To provide support in literacy and study skills for year 7 pupils. The Helen Arkell Centre are providing twice weekly.
The Grammar – Translation Method
Communicative Language Teaching Vocabulary
Current research and practice in teaching vocabulary Chapter 24.
Framework for Diagnostic Teaching. Framework The framework for diagnostic teaching places a premium on tailoring programs that specifically fit all readers.
2.7.1 Techniques for Presenting Vocabulary
Teaching Vocabulary Chapter 14
Four Basic Principles to Follow: Test what was taught. Test what was taught. Test in a way that reflects way in which it was taught. Test in a way that.
Increasing Reading Vocabulary
Maine Department of Education 2006 Maine Reading First Course Session #13 Vocabulary Research and Assessment.
Teaching language means teaching the components of language Content (also called semantics) refers to the ideas or concepts being communicated. Form refers.
Total Physical Response (TPR)
Academic Needs of L2/Bilingual Learners
Learning a Foreign Language Programa Inglés Abre Puertas Unidad de Curriculum y Evaluación Ministerio de Educación.
Teaching Vocabulary What is vocabulary ? Vocabulary can be defined as the words we teach in the foreign language. Vocabulary is the glue that holds stories,
Supplementary materials
Vocabulary Acquisition Learning and teaching vocabulary.
Claudia Yáñez. Advanced students and their needs Advanced learners can communicate well Advanced learners can communicate well Through The basics structures.
ADVANCED STUDENTS AND THEIR NEEDS Advanced learners can generally communicate well, having learnt all the basic structures of the language. However, they.
Using a Story-Based Approach to Teach Grammar
Group E: Erin, Jack, Cloud.  Introduction - Why teaching Vocabulary - Incidental learning & Explicit instruction - Selecting words for instruction -
Prepared by Teacher Angel. I. Vocabulary  Kinds of Vocabulary  What does it mean to know a word?  Obstacles in Vocabulary Development  Primary Goals.
THE GRAMMAR TRANSLATION METHOD
VOCABULARY STRATEGIES -Awareness of words -Wide reading & extensive writing -Independent strategies.
Developing Writing Skills in a Mixed-Language Classroom Tetyana Bidna.
Module 8 Teaching English Learners
LING 322. DEVELOPMENT OF VOCABULARY AS LANGUAGE RESOURCE VOCABULARY AND CONCEPTUAL DEVELOPMENT DIFFERENT ASPECTS OF VOCABULARY KNOWLEDGE PRINCIPLES FOR.
 There must be a coherent set of links between techniques and principles.  The actions are the techniques and the thoughts are the principles.
Differentiation What is meant by differences between learners?
“Using a Story-Based Approach to Teach Grammar”
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND THE REFORM THE NATIONAL RECOMMENDATIONS.
2014 Fall Semester- Week 6. Introduction (1) 1. James Asher (1960) hypothesis: Language learning starts first with understanding and ends with production.
Teaching Academic Vocabulary to English Language Learners Where do we start?
Objective: Enabling students to translate from English into Arabic and vice versa. Why teach translation: It develops accuracy, fluency, clarity, and.
New secondary curriculum overview Use of target language Key aspects of change to KS3 practice.
Teaching lexis in ESP Teaching Vocabulary in ESP.
Teaching Vocabulary module (5) Dr. Suzan Arafat Presented by : Ramz Zayed.
COURSE AND SYLLABUS DESIGN
Chapter 3 Vocabulary Paul Nation & Paul Meara.
A well-balanced language course should consis t of four roughly equal strands: Meaning-focused input Meaning focused output Language focused learning Fluency.
HARMER, CHAPTER 14 ATESL, 2009, #48A&B Teaching Vocabulary.
Read the following assumptions about vocabulary in English learning and decide if you agree with them or not. 1.A vocabulary item can be more than one.
TEACHING VOCABULARY THROUGH READING By Duygu KÖKLÜ& Ceylan ÇAKIR – Many successful.
Spring, 2012 Local District English Learner Coordinators.
1 Teaching vocabulary Going beyond the textbook Penny Ur 2009.
ELL353 Welcome to Week #3 Dr. Holly Wilson. This Week’s Assignments 1. Readings 2. Discussion #1: Teaching Vocabulary 3. Discussion #2: Vocabulary Lesson.
1 Vocabulary acquisition from extensive reading: A case study Maria Pigada and Norbert Schmitt ( 2006)
Incidental / intentional teaching of vocabulary from reading.
Schmitt, N. (2008). Instructed second language vocabulary learning. Language Teaching Research, 12(3),
Teaching Vocabulary. Aims of this unit 1 What are some of the assumptions about vocabulary learning? 2 what does knowing a word involve? 3 How can we.
MAAL6018 Vocabulary Teaching And Learning Course Outline Session 1Building blocks and dimensions of vocabulary knowledge - What is a word? What is meant.
Adolescent Literacy Improving reading skills of high school students.
Teaching Vocabulary. Goals: Provide you own definition of the term vocabulary Distinguish the different types of vocabulary (high frequency, academic,
Vocabulary Acquisition in a Second Language: Do Learners Really Acquire Most Vocabulary by Reading? Some Empirical Evidence Batia Laufer.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE AND THE REFORM
An Overview Of Vision 1 Summer 1395.
What is the knowledge of words and word meanings called? A.) Comprehension B.) Decoding C.) Vocabulary C.) Vocabulary D.) Inferences L F.
Presentation transcript:

Teaching Vocabulary

The importance of vocabulary "Without grammar very little can be conveyed; without vocabulary nothing can be conveyed." (Wilkins 1972:111) "When students travel, they don't carry grammar books, they carry dictionaries." (Krashen in Lewis 1993: iii)

"The more one considers the matter, the more reasonable it seems to suppose that lexis is where we need to start from, the syntax needs to be put to the service of words and not the other way round." (Widdowsen in Lewis 1993:115)

B. How many words are needed for effective communication in L2? Level Number of Words Text Coverage%  High-frequency words 2,000 87 Academic vocabulary 800 8 Technical vocabulary 2,000 3 Total to be learned 4,800 98 Low-frequency words 123,200 2 Total 128,000 100  from Nation and Newton, 1997, p.239 

C. What words to teach? Some criteria for selecting vocabularies Criteria Definition Your rating of importance? Range: the extent to which a word occurs in the different types of texts  Coverage: the capacity of a word to replace other words  Frequency: the number of occurrences of a word in the target language  Learnability: the extent to which a word can be learned without difficulty  language needs: the extent to which a word is regarded as "required" by the learner in order to communicate 

D. What to Teach While Teaching Vocabulary Form pronunciation spelling inflections derivations Meaning basic and literal meanings derived and figurative meanings semantic relation connotation Usage subcategorization collocation sociolinguistic and stylistic restrictions slangs and idioms

E. What is involved in Teaching Vocabulary? 1. Presentation (outcome: establish an entry in the episodic memory with correct form and basic meaning) Ways of Presenting the Meaning of New Items (Ur, 1996) concise definition (as in a dictionary; often a superordinate with qualifications) detailed description (of appearance, qualities...) examples (hyponyms) illustration (picture, object) demonstration (acting, mime) context (story or sentence in which the item occurs) synonyms opposites(s) (antonyms) translation associated ideas, collocations.

2. Practice and Consolidation (outcome: store the item in the long-term memory; turn passive vocabulary into active vocabulary) Ideas for practice and consolidation songs and games semantic field and semantic mapping key word method vocabulary exercises regular review

3. Lexical/Semantic Development (outcome: integrate lexical/semantic information into entries; move words from episodic memory to lexicon) Ideas for lexical/semantic development extensive reading communicative activities

F. Incidental Vocabulary Acquisition (IVA) What is IVA? Definition: IVA is the learning of new words as a by-product of a meaning-focused communicative activity, such as reading, listening, and interaction. It occurs through "multiple exposures to a word in different contexts." (Huckin and Coady, 1999, p. 185)

Limitations of explicit vocabulary teaching Much of the lexical and semantic information cannot be or is not described and taught as explicit knowledge; There is too much information involved in vocabulary that it is just impossible to teach it all. What is taught does not necessarily lead to lexical competence on the learner's part. Conclusion: much lexical competence has to be developed through natural communication.

Learners are able to pick up vocabulary - through extensive reading - through communicative interactions - through exposure to natural input such as movies, TV.

Advantages of IVA a. It is contextualized, giving the learner a richer sense of a word's use and meaning than can be provided in traditional paired-associate exercises, b. it is pedagogically efficient in that it enables two activities---vocabulary acquisition and reading--to occur at the same time, and

c. it is more individualized and learner-based because the vocabulary being acquired is dependent on the learner's own selection of reading materials. d. presentation, consolidation and lexical/semantic development occur at the same time (parallel vs. serial process of lexical development);

Disadvantages IVA does not work for learning the basic core vocabulary. there is no control over what is to be learned; Incorrect guessing may lead to incorrect understanding of vocabulary;

Some Conclusions about incidental vocabulary acquisition by Thomas Huckin and James Coady (1999) based on their review of the literature: 1. Incidental learning is not entirely "incidental," as the learner must pay at least some attention to individual words. However, the amount of attention and the amount of learning varies according to a number of factors, including context, type of attention, and task demands.

2. Incidental learning requires a basic sight-recognition vocabulary of at least 3,000 word families. For university-level texts, a knowledge of 5,000-10,000 word families may be needed. 3. Although incidental acquisition takes place incrementally over a period of time, there is no agreement as to how many and what kinds of exposures are needed for successful acquisition.

4. Effective word guessing requires the flexible application of a variety of processing strategies, ranging from local ones such as graphemic identification to global ones such as the use of broader contextual meanings.

5. Some strategies seem to arise naturally but others need to be taught. 6. Students generally benefit from explicit vocabulary instruction in conjunction with extensive reading

7. Some kinds of reading texts are more conducive to incidental learning than others--in particular, texts that are personally interesting to learners. 8. Input modification, including glossing of specific words, is generally effective, especially if it involves the learner interactively.

9. Incidental learning depends on educated guesswork and thus can lead to imprecision, misrecognition, and interference with the reading process. To overcome these problems, learners need to have a well-developed core vocabulary, a stock of good reading strategies, and some prior familiarity with the subject matter.

Conclusion Explicit vocabulary teaching is necessary for teaching the core vocabulary, particularly for the learning of basic lexical and semantic knowledge. Incidental vocabulary acquisition should be encouraged for further lexical and semantic development of the words learned through explicit instruction and for learning additional vocabulary.