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Anyone who's tried his/her hand at doing makeup knows that even this art of face
painting requires quite a bit of vocabulary learning.
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In Chapter 8 of Reading Strategies and Practices: A compendium (Tierney & Readance) and Chapter 5 of Content-Area Literacy: Reaching and Teaching the 21st Century Adolescent (Tom Bean, Scott Baldwin, and John Readence), the authors list a number of strategies for teaching vocabulary. Vocabulary learning is a key part in just about any subject and field. As a student, I was never a fan of memorizing words. When given a vocabulary quiz, I would cram them the night before and commit them to long-term memory just long enough to make it through the test. As someone who personally struggles with learning vocabulary and finding the task motivating, I was eager to see what kinds of strategies these reading experts can give.
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Constructing a sentence using the vocabulary word is a part of the personal glossary method. |
By giving a bunch of strategies, the two chapters advocate using different methods for teaching vocabulary suited for different
purposes/readings/subjects. Vocabulary learning is actually a big part of learning math. Some of the strategies than I can see being used in math include possible sentences (can possibly be used to assess common misconceptions of key terms), word map/semantic mapping (works to organize concepts), personal glossary (ask students to look up the definitions and compose their own glossary--a sure method for all lessons), R^3 (rehearse words a few times might help commit them to memory), verbal/visual word association (4-box method can be used to give non-examples and examples for geometry shapes/definitions), clues/questions (can be used to help students review key terms), etymologia (learning interesting word etymologies can be fun), and morphologia (analyzing morphemes that make up the technical terms to help understanding). As I was writing my math unit plan for another class, I find myself looking for more engaging ways to teach/review vocabulary terms such as frequency, histogram, outlier, interquartile range, and central tendency. An obvious method that's applicable is the personal glossary one. Also morphologia could be used for the word "interquartile." In the unit review part of the lesson plan, clues/questions can be used (students write the fill-in-blank questions for one another to answer). And finally, for particularly important key words, R^3 can be used in class to further help commit their sounds/meanings to long-term memory. However, with an exception to the etymologia method, I wonder how these strategies can be implemented to engage and motivate students (rather than bore them with dry memorization). After all, memorization in learning vocabulary is important, but it can be very dry.
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Some "Fun" with Math Vocabulary |
Xiao,
ReplyDeleteYour struggles with vocabulary are quite alien to me; I *loved* learning new words in early grades and tried my hardest to assimilate them into my daily speech. Of course, now that I'm in a class, I tend to drop polysyllabic and/or arcane bombshells on my students who don't have any idea what I'm saying. Then again, I'm looking at this from a native-speaker's perspective and I have become somewhat aware that I am not as good at perspective taking as I could be.
Something a bit more constructive now: Perhaps if you find yourself using the R3 method, why not try and have some fun with it? Say it "seriously" at first, then be silly with it. Math has a reputation for being dry and sterile, but it is a hard heart that does not chuckle or grin when hearing "interquartile" said with an overwrought pirate accent.
On a separate note, I really like how you use videos and images to get your points across. You blog very well!
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