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  • Secondary Reading Instruction (Part 1): Teaching Vocabulary and Comprehension in the Content Areas
Challenge
Initial Thoughts
Perspectives & Resources

Do you think teachers should teach vocabulary and reading comprehension skills within their content areas? (Opinion Question: No Resources)

What are the responsibilities of middle- and high school teachers for teaching vocabulary and comprehension skills within their content areas?

  • 1: Literacy in Content-Area Instruction

What should content-area teachers know about vocabulary instruction?

  • 2: Components of Effective Vocabulary Instruction
  • 3: Selecting Essential Words
  • 4: Explicitly Defining and Contextualizing Terms
  • 5: Helping Students Actively Process Vocabulary
  • 6: Providing Multiple Exposures to Vocabulary
  • 7: Building Vocabulary and Conceptual Knowledge Using the Frayer Model

What should content-area teachers know about comprehension instruction?

  • 8: Components of Effective Comprehension Instruction
  • 9: Activating Prior Knowledge
  • 10: Monitoring Comprehension
  • 11: Using Graphic Organizers
  • 12: Answering Questions
  • 13: Generating Questions

Resources

  • 14: References, Additional Resources, and Credits
Wrap Up
Assessment
Provide Feedback

What should content-area teachers know about vocabulary instruction?

Page 2: Components of Effective Vocabulary Instruction

students reading

Vocabulary is the content-specific words that students must know if they are to understand the material in a given subject area. When they introduce new vocabulary, content-area teachers commonly assign a list of words from the chapter for students to define and memorize. However, this is not a particularly effective means of helping students to understand or use the words in appropriate ways. Students often forget the vocabulary soon after they are tested on it and are therefore unlikely to retain critical information or to understand related content.

When you consider the number of words that students must understand if they are to successfully make sense of a given text, you soon realize that teaching the meaning of those words one by one is insufficient.

Listen as Sharon Vaughn identifies some of the things students need to be able to do to learn new word meanings (time:1:54).

Sharon Vaughn

Sharon Vaughn, PhD
Professor of Special Education
Director of the Vaughn Gross Center for Reading and Language Arts
University of Texas, Austin

/wp-content/uploads/module_media/sec_rdng_media/audio/sec_rdng_audio_page02_vaughn.mp3

View Transcript

Transcript: Sharon Vaughn, PhD

There are three things that students need to be able to do in order to accumulate the number of word meanings they need. Number one, they need to be taught the meanings of important, necessary, complex words such as egalitarian, or manufacture, or cell in the sense of biology. Number two, they need to learn how to use text as a source for deriving the meaning of words that they don’t know. So as part of number two, they first need to be able to recognize I don’t know what that word means, and that’s no small problem. Students can’t just plow through text and not recognize when there’s a word that they don’t know. They need to know the word they don’t know, and then they need to be able to use the text by rereading previous text and rereading other text to find out oh, that’s what that word means, and particularly in the content area many of the complex words are defined in the text itself. Number three, students need to be able to be word-finders and word-collectors outside the content area so that when they’re listening to television, when they’re eavesdropping on conversations, or when they’re reading other text, they attend to words they don’t know, they remember the word they don’t know, and they collect the meaning of those words so that they become independent word-meaning learners, and it is with the combination of those three things that they’re likely to be very successful.

Teachers can provide more-effective vocabulary instruction by:

Four Vocabulary Note cards: Select Essential Words, Define and Contextualize, actively process and Provide multiple exposures.

  • Selecting essential words
  • Explicitly defining and contextualizing those words
  • Helping students to actively process the information
  • Providing multiple exposures to the words

These four elements will be explained in greater detail on the module pages that follow.

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