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Olympia High School SIP Day – January 12, 2007

Olympia High School SIP Day – January 12, 2007. Background Knowledge and Vocabulary Acquisition. School Improvement Team. Chris Embry Mohr Ruth McCartney Susan Mullen Connie Schroeder Beth Smith Robin Staudenmeier Lance Thurman.

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Olympia High School SIP Day – January 12, 2007

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  1. Olympia High SchoolSIP Day – January 12, 2007 Background Knowledge and Vocabulary Acquisition

  2. School Improvement Team • Chris Embry Mohr • Ruth McCartney • Susan Mullen • Connie Schroeder • Beth Smith • Robin Staudenmeier • Lance Thurman

  3. Articles on improving reading in high schools have been distributed and discussed. Round table discussions on reading, reading strategies being used currently, and how to improve reading at OHS. A reading research committee was developed to make recommendations to OHS faculty as to the steps to be taken to improve reading at OHS. 2003/2004

  4. The recommendation of three initiatives to implement: • Sustained Silent Reading Program • Enhance library of non-textbook, content related reading materials • Training for reading strategies

  5. 2004/2005 • Who: All sophomores and juniors • What: Sustained Silent Reading twice per week • When: Program begins on Monday, Sept. 13th taking place on Monday and Wednesday during advisory time. • How: Reading materials driven by student choice – brought from home or from the OHS library. • Why: To develop greater motivation and an appreciation for reading.

  6. 2005/2006 • Sustained Silent Reading All grades once a week • Development of book clubs • Restructuring of NCA Team and process • Begin Research of reading in content areas

  7. 2006/2007 • Rewrite SIP plan to focus only on reading • Focus of research leads to information on background knowledge and essential vocabulary • SIP training on essential vocabulary • Site visit from NCA

  8. Cause for Alarm • Approximately 32 percent of high school graduates are not ready for college level English composition courses (ACT, 2005). • Approximately 40 percent of high school graduates lack the literacy skills employers seek (Achieve, Inc., 2005). • Between 1996 and 2006, the average literacy required for all American occupations is projected to rise by 14 percent. • Both dropouts and high school graduates are demonstrating significantly worse reading skills than ten years ago (NCES, 2005).

  9. A Student’s ability to learn new content is dependent on: • The skill of the teacher • The interest of the student • The complexity of the content • The student’s Background Knowledge

  10. The Importance of Background Knowledge There is a strong correlation between a person’s background knowledge of a topic and the extent to which a person learns new information on the topic. The research strongly suggests that teaching vocabulary is synonymous with teaching background knowledge. Knowledge is power!

  11. Why teach vocabulary? • Increasing demands for higher levels of literacy in the workforce require that we do better than we have ever done before in teaching all children to read. • Perhaps the biggest misconception is that teaching vocabulary means teaching dictionary definitions.

  12. So Many Words, So Little Time! • Research shows that most students need to encounter a word at least 12 times before they know it well enough to improve comprehension. • Vocabulary knowledge accounts for over 80% of the variance in reading comprehension scores at grade level. • Researchers estimate that students learn an average of 3,000 words per year, or 8 words a day, but some learn as few as 2 a day. • Adequate reading comprehension depends on a student already knowing 90-95% of the words in a text. • Another study found that children from advantaged homes knew five times the amount of words as children from disadvantaged homes. High School Seniors near the top of their class knew about four times as many words as their low performing classmates.

  13. Idea • The words we know, are tags or labels for our packets of knowledge. • Idea • The Traditional concept of vocabulary has been artificially limited in its scope. • Idea • The more words we have, the more packets of knowledge, and the more background knowledge we have. • Idea • A word does not refer to a single object, but to a group or to a class of objects. What is a word? Idea

  14. School Improvement Timeline • 2007 Background Knowledge/Vocabulary • 2007-08 Summarizing • 2008-09 Connecting • 2009-2010 Inferring

  15. Which list of words or phrases is most likely to help students at Olympia be successful? • honor, responsibility, loyalty • mass, endothermic reaction, ecosystem • government, geography, music • sex, sex, MySpace.com

  16. Impact of Direct Vocabulary Instruction

  17. Do you agree with this statement? • The best way to improve vocabulary is through wide reading.

  18. A textbook example…

  19. What the research supports • To learn a word requires anywhere from 6 to 10 exposures to the word in context. • Low density texts provide a 30% chance of students learning words in context • High density texts provide a 7% chance of learning words in context. • A student with a high degree of background knowledge has a greater chance of learning a new word in context then a student with a lower degree.

  20. Characteristics of Effective Direct Vocabulary Instruction • Effective vocabulary instruction does not rely on definitions

  21. How do you typically teach new vocabulary? • Teacher provides or has students look up a definition in a dictionary. • Student writes the definition • Student uses the new word in a sentence to demonstrate the understanding

  22. Base: The expression that is used as a factor in repeated multiplication.

  23. Does this descriptionof the term help?

  24. Pictures can demonstrate deep understanding.

  25. Characteristics of Effective Direct Vocabulary Instruction • Effective vocabulary instruction does not rely on definitions • Students must represent their knowledge of words in linguistic and non-linguistic ways

  26. What the research shows • For information to be placed in permanent memory, it must be dual-coded: linguistic and non-linguistic • Non-linguistic approaches produce a gain of • 37 percentile points higher than by having students review definitions • 21 percentile points higher than having students generate their own sentences

  27. Types of Non-linguistic Representations

  28. Draw the actual thing

  29. Draw a symbol

  30. Draw an example

  31. Represent with graphics

  32. Dramatize the term

  33. Teaching Students to Write Descriptions and Draw Images It’s going to be slow at first…..

  34. Pick one of these terms and try describe it and draw it • English: context clue • Science: control • Business: compound interest • Math: variable expression • PE: range of motion • Health: osteoporosis • Music: pitch • Visual Arts: negative space • Civics: self-evident truths

  35. Characteristics of Effective Direct Vocabulary Instruction • Effective vocabulary instruction does not rely on definitions • Students must represent their knowledge of words in linguistic and non-linguistic ways • Effective Vocabulary instruction involves the gradual shaping of meanings through multiple exposures

  36. What the research shows • Multiple exposures => full and flexible knowledge • During repeated exposures learning is enhanced if the students interact with vocabulary in a variety of ways • Description • Non-linguistic representation • Identify similarities and differences

  37. Ways to Identify Similarities and Differences • Compare (and contrast) • Classify • Create Metaphors • Create Analogies

  38. Compare and Contrast

  39. Classifying Helps students better understand the content that is classified and helps them see the content in different ways

  40. Talk a Mile-a-Minute

  41. Things Associated with Outer Space Sun Orbits Mars Venus Saturn Galaxy Meteors Star Trek

  42. Artists Vincent Van Gogh Michelangelo Picasso Leonardo da Vinci Monet Rembrandt Andy Warhol Charles Schultz

  43. Parts of Speech Noun Verb Adjective Preposition Conjunction Adverb Pronoun Expletives

  44. Creating Metaphors Metaphor activities help students better understand the abstract features of a concept by identifying the general principles or basic patterns that are shared between terms that are not related literally.

  45. Creating MetaphorsComponents of the Cell

  46. Components of the Cell

  47. Analogies (a is to b as c is to d) Analogical thinking is perhaps the most complex activity involving similarities and differences and requires in-depth analysis of the content.

  48. One term missing • Bone is to skeleton as word is to _______. • Inch is to foot as millimeter is to _______. • Martin Luther King Jr. is to civil rights as ______ is to women’s rights.

  49. Two Terms Missing • Harry Truman is to World War II as _____ is to _____. • Rhythm is to music as _____ is to _____. • Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee is to Native Americans as ______ is to _____.

  50. Analogy Graphic

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