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Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson, Michelle Hosp University of Utah John Hosp Florida State University
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Page 1: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project

IRA Research Conference

Atlanta, Georgia

May 3, 2008

Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson, Michelle Hosp

University of Utah

John Hosp

Florida State University

Page 2: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Overview of the Talk

Anticipation Guide

Background to the Study

Research Questions

Methods

Results & Discussion

Implications of Research for Professional Development and Practice

Page 3: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Background to the StudyWord knowledge gap between middle-class and high poverty students begins well before students enter kindergarten.

Word knowledge gap gets bigger as students get older.

Biemiller (2005) estimates that the bottom 25%-achieving students begin kindergarten with 1,000 fewer root word meanings than average-achieving students.

Page 4: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Background of the Study

Research and vocabulary scholars suggest at least three components of teaching vocabulary:

1) specific word meanings

2) word-learning strategies

3) word consciousness

Page 5: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Specific Word MeaningsEffective teaching includes:– Using student-friendly definitions.– Providing example sentences.– Using words in more than one context.– Teaching words deeply if you want to

impact text comprehension.– Teaching new words for known concepts.– Providing repeated practice with words.

Page 6: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Word-Learning Strategies

Effective teaching includes:– Showing students how to break down

words into specific word parts that have meaning.

– Showing students how to use context clues to estimate the meaning of words.

Page 7: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Word Consciousness

Effective teaching includes:– filling students’ lives with a variety of words

and allowing them to have fun with language and words.

Page 8: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Background to the Study

Teachers spend an average of 3% to 20% of their instructional time on vocabulary with the percentage varying depending on the block of time used for analysis (Durkin, 1978-79; Roser and Juel, 1982; Blachowitz, 1987; Watts, 1995; Scott, Jamieson-Noel, and Asselin, 2003).

None of these studies conducted specifically on primary grades.

Page 9: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Research QuestionsHow do primary grade teachers teach vocabulary (within a school reform project)?

• How much time and how often do they teach the meanings of words?

• What methods do they use for teaching words to their students?

• What are their perceptions of their vocabulary instruction?

Page 10: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Context of the Study

– The school reform project was Reading First.

– The goal of Reading First was to increase the number of students reading on grade level by the end of the third grade.

– All schools were Title I schools.– The project impacted districts, schools and

teachers.

Page 11: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Impact on Districts

Assistance in identifying professional development needs of individual schools.

Professional development in reading (including vocabulary development) for principals, coaches and teachers.

Page 12: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Impact on Schools and Teachers

Compensation for reading endorsement classes.Professional development at the state and district levels.Participation in grade/school level study groups (Discuss students progress and instructional strategies).Coach mentoring and feedback.

Page 13: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

MethodsObservations of kindergarten, first, second and third grade teachers participating in school reform project.

Follow-up interviews with teachers participating in the same project.

Page 14: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Observations

Year 2 of the project: 111 teachers.Year 3 of the project: 107 teachers.Year 4 of the project: 119 teachers.Total number: 337 observations of teachers.Conducted over a 3-hour literacy block. 90 minutes for reading.

Page 15: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Observation InstrumentICE-R2 instrument– Adapted from Edmonds., M. S., & Briggs,

K. L. (In press). Instructional Content Emphasis instrument. In S. R. Vaughn & K. L. Briggs (Eds.) Reading in the classroom: Systems for observing teaching and learning. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes.

– Adapted by University of Utah Reading First evaluators.

Page 16: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

ICE-R2Observers focus on teachers’ behaviors during the 3 hour reading/language arts time block.

They take extensive field notes.

They then code 10 dimensions of language arts instruction.

One of those dimensions is vocabulary.

Page 17: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Observation InstrumentObserved developed short summaries of teacher behavior:– “T refers to vocabulary chart-asks Ss about

root words, suffixes and prefixes on words, e.g. galloped, glistened.”

– “T and Ss read from a passage…Ss are to understand the vocabulary words off to the side of the passage by reading and deciding the meaning in context.”

Page 18: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Observation Instrument

Researchers used these summaries to develop a new coding scheme.

Result was the development of the K-3 Direct Vocabulary Instruction Instrument.

Page 19: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

K-3 Direct Vocabulary Instruction Instrument

1) Includes teaching: – specific words: defining, examples or non-

examples, explaining or elaborating, generating sentences, combinations of these.

– word-learning strategies: context clues, word parts, synonyms or antonyms, combinations of these.

– word consciousness: word play, games, figures of speech.

Page 20: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

K-3 Direct Vocabulary Instruction Instrument

2) Includes explicit or implicit teaching of vocabulary:– Explicit--defined as teacher-directed

instruction, particularly• Teacher talk (teacher alone), teacher/student

interaction (teacher and student), or student practice.

– Implicit--defined as embedded within an activity--e.g. teacher read-aloud.

Page 21: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

K-3 Direct Vocabulary Instruction Instrument

3) Includes oral and or written dimension:Was the instruction:

* oral (only speaking)?

* written (worksheets, writing sentences, journal entries)?

* combination of both?

Page 22: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

InterviewsFifteen purposefully selected teachers who had participated in the project in all of the years of the observations to date.

Scripted questions designed to elicit conversation about specific areas of vocabulary instruction and their purposes for providing the instruction.

Page 23: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Results and DiscussionOn average, 7.55 minutes of instruction (4.74% of the literacy block across three years).On average, 60% of the teachers provided vocabulary instruction.On average, those who taught vocabulary did so twice (2.0 times) during the literacy blocks.Kindergarten teachers provided the least vocabulary instruction; third-grade teachers the most.

Page 24: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Across 3 Years

Instruction by Grade

K

1

2

3

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Percentage of Vocabulary Teaching

Page 25: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Methods of Instruction

Teaching Specific Words: 90%

Word-Learning Strategies: 9%

Word-Consciousness: 1%

Page 26: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teaching Specific Words

“T gives definition of words on word wall and Ss say which word wall word fits the definition. T says these are amazing words, ‘interrupt and protest.’ T asks Ss if they know meanings. They talk about the definitions. T writes definitions on board.”

Page 27: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teaching Word-Learning Strategies

“T tells Ss they will use context clues to find meanings in words they don’t know. T begins to read passage and Ss follow along. T stops to ask vocabulary questions from words on the board. As they find meanings for the word, T writes definition on the board.”

Page 28: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teaching Word Consciousness

“Teacher hands out little books called, Dinosaur Riddles. T has students read the riddles to themselves and then asks for students to guess the answers. Teacher explains to students why the riddles are funny. Example: What do you call a dinosaur that smashes everything in its path? Tyrannosaurus Wrecks.”

Page 29: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Methods of Instruction

Teaching specific words:– Definitions of words 46%– Using examples and non-ex. 10%– Explaining/elaborating 9%– Using sentences 10%

– Combination of approaches 22%

Page 30: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teaching Words by Examples and Sentences“T writes the word lonely on the easel. Ss repeat the word and T explains the definition. Ss give examples of when they were lonely.”“T and Ss have a discussion about each word on the chart (county, auctioneer, bid) and use the words in a sentence.”

Page 31: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Explicit or Implicit Instruction

Explicit across 3 years 99%

Implicit across 3 years 1%

Explicit Instruction

Student/teacher interaction 92%

Student practice 6% Teacher talk

2%

Page 32: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Oral or Written Instruction

Oral Across 3 Years: 14%

Written Across 3 Years: 6%

Oral and Written Across 3 Years: 80%

Page 33: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teachers’ Perceptions about and Explanations for Teaching

Vocabulary1) They are purposeful in choosing words

to teach:* Connected to decoding, spelling, and fluency.

* Present in basals.

* To achieve on standardized tests.

* Words to use with Text Talk (Beck & McKeown).

Page 34: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Teachers’ Perceptions about and Explanations for Teaching

Vocabulary

2) Teachers discussed the teaching of specific words, but not word-learning strategies or word consciousness.

3) Teachers described and appeared to have inert knowledge about vocabulary instruction that had not been enacted in their classroom practice.

Page 35: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

ConclusionsFindings related to the amount and frequency of vocabulary instruction are consistent with other observational studies.

With professional development, these primary grade teachers were able to provide vocabulary instruction beyond assigning and mentioning.

Such instruction is explicit in that teachers are directly working with students to understand and learn new words.

Page 36: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Conclusions

On the other hand, K-3 teachers did not teach students word-learning strategies very often.

Neither did teachers promote word consciousness.

Page 37: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Conclusions

Thus, teachers either began with or were able to develop intermediate levels of knowledge and enacted practice of vocabulary instruction.

Page 38: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Conclusions

But, K-3 teachers did not have what we would call advanced levels of knowledge and enacted practice of vocabulary instruction.

Page 39: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Conclusions

Novice - Assigning and mentioning, simple worksheets, dictionary definitions only, not purposeful in choosing words.

Intermediate - Student friendly definitions, using examples/nonexamples, a combination of approaches, writing and talking about words, purposeful in choosing words.

Page 40: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Conclusions

Advanced - Including all 3 components of instruction, striving for deep understanding as needed through semantic approaches such as mapping and feature analysis, offering repeated exposure to the words in different contexts.

Page 41: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

Implications of Research for Professional Development

It is unclear what professional development these teachers had in vocabulary instruction.– We know they did learn about Beck et al.’s

Three Tier Model.– They also learned Text Talk (Beck et al.).– We doubt, but not know, that they learned

much about word learning strategies or word consciousness.

Page 42: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

A Professional DevelopmentCurriculum in Vocabulary

What should it look like?Theory and research on vocabulary

acquisition.How students learn new words.The achievement gap in vocabulary learning

(high achievers vs. low achievers). Best teaching practices.

Page 43: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

A Professional DevelopmentCurriculum in Vocabulary

Best teaching practices on:

Specific words.

Word-learning strategies.

Word-consciousness.

Page 44: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

A Professional DevelopmentCurriculum in Vocabulary

When teachers want students to learn words deeply to affect comprehension:

-- Semantic maps.

-- Concept maps.

-- Semantic feature analysis.

-- Frayer method.

Page 45: Teaching Vocabulary to Primary Grade Students Within a School Reform Project IRA Research Conference Atlanta, Georgia May 3, 2008 Jan Dole, Kristin Nelson,

A Professional DevelopmentCurriculum in Vocabulary

Explicit instruction in vocabulary

* Modeling and explanation (I do).

* Guided practice (We do).

* Independent practice (You do).


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