Sunday, November 2, 2014

Academic Vocabulary and English Language Learners?

Summarize, interpret, and infer are just a few words that students need to know to be college and career ready.  What does this look like in the classroom if you are teaching how to converse with a medical professional or fill out a job application?  I'm going to share advice from a few national experts.

Let's start with what words to teach.  Basically, words are grouped into three tiers:

  • Tier I -- words that commonly appear in spoken language and rarely require explicit instruction (i.e. book, sad, today)
  • Tier II -- high frequency words for mature language users that are encountered across content areas.  Students may first encounter these words in print and are tricky to learn because they generally do not appear in spoken language (i.e. consist, establish, indicate, sufficient)
  • Tier III -- content specific words like simile in English Language Arts and biosphere in science.
If you are in need of a website to support Tier II vocabulary encountered during classroom text activities, try VocabAhead.  You can select Tier II words from a word bank in the column to the right, sort words by grade level, click on the word to see a visual interpretation of the meaning, listen to the pronunciation and the word in a sentence, and follow along by reading the spoken text below the picture.  It's a one-stop shop for vocabulary building.  Visual learners will really appreciate the pictures associated with the word.


For a more authentic approach to vocabulary building, I highly recommend this article from ReadingRockets by Beck, McKeown, and Kucan that will help you select Tier II words from a text.  It may be tempting to focus on all unfamiliar words in a text, but we should be more specific now as we transition to the CCRS.  Think about a text with the word petticoat and the word emerge.  Both are unfamiliar, but where is our time better spent?  Forgo the petticoat and work on emerge.  I know students will want to reach for their pocket translators to look up every unknown word, so it's your job to help them sort through the vocabulary.  Beck and her co-authors suggest choosing high frequency words that your learners will be able to explain using words they already know and will encounter across subject areas.  Let's try it out.

This is a sample text from the Beck, McKeown, and Kucan article.  Which words would you focus on in your classroom?

Johnny Harrington was a kind master who treated his servants fairly. He was also a successful wool merchant, and his business required that he travel often. In his absence, his servants would tend to the fields and cattle and maintain the upkeep of his mansion. They performed their duties happily, for they felt fortunate to have such a benevolent and trusting master.

Did you choose the words below?

Tier Two wordsStudents' likely expressions
merchantsalesperson or clerk
requiredhave to
tendtake care of
maintainkeep going
performeddid
fortunatelucky
benevolentkind

This is brilliant.  Our students know 'have to', so just guide them to 'required'.  Your students already have a sense of the word, now they can simply replace it with a more academic term.

So now you're looking at a word wall or a list of academic vocabulary from a specific text.  Now what?  Again, let's turn to the experts.

These three articles from TeachingChannel.org are MUST READS for ESL/ELL instructors (if you haven't signed up to access Teaching Channel videos and information, do it.  Do it now.). The first article, by Lily Jones, summarizes a series of four videos that will teach you how to involve ELL's in academic conversations.  Topics include talk moves, adapting Socratic seminars, participation protocol, and reflecting on discussions.  The second, by Nicole Knight, provides the why and how of academic discussions and links to useful resources.  The third, by Jeff Zwiers will give you specific strategies for developing oral language.  I particularly like his Opinion Continuum activity:

Opinion Continuum: Students share where they fall on the continuum of a two-sided issue and why. At the end, they share if they shifted at all along the continuum based on their conversations with partners.

I would even consider bringing two political cartoons into class -- one from each side of a controversial issue.  You could introduce the opinion continuum with visuals and then transition to a short text when the students are familiar with the task and your expectations.

If you have attended any of our CCRS trainings, you know that we love to say, "evidence, evidence, evidence" as we describe the English Language Arts shifts.  Zwiers writes that if we assign a task to locate evidence in a text, students can find 'evidence-y' things and stop there.  He posits that if we push our learners towards evaluation by supporting/defending an opinion or placing ideas or evidence along a continuum, our learners will provide stronger and clearer answers (learning!) and become better prepared for the communication demands of college and career.  For example, in Nevada, you may be following the Tesla news and could read a newspaper article on Tesla's new billion-dollar plant.  You may be tempted to ask, "How does the new Tesla plant affect the average Nevadan?"  Zwiers suggests simply adding, "most affect" to the question and watching your students' minds shift into learning-mode.

For those over-achieving instructors out there, you can evaluate your discussion practice using the Academic Discussion Continuum of Teacher Practice rubric and scroll down to find five activities for more effective interaction on the last page.

Zwiers and Crawford (2011) discovered seven features of effective discussion tasks.  I'll close with three of them, in the form of questions, to ask yourself about your classroom practice:

1.  Do you require both partners to talk?
2.  Do you require critical and creative thinking?
3.  Do you take advantage of controversies and conflict?

If you answered no to any of the questions above, you may want to start there.

Let us know if you try any of the academic discussion strategies by posting below.