0% found this document useful (0 votes)
136 views13 pages

Six Step Process

The document outlines Marzano's six step process for teaching academic vocabulary. The steps include providing a description or example of new terms, having students restate the terms in their own words, asking students to create a graphic representing the term, periodically engaging students in activities to expand their knowledge of terms, having students discuss terms with each other, and involving students in games using the terms. The document then provides specific strategies for implementing each step of the process.

Uploaded by

Amir Abdullah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
136 views13 pages

Six Step Process

The document outlines Marzano's six step process for teaching academic vocabulary. The steps include providing a description or example of new terms, having students restate the terms in their own words, asking students to create a graphic representing the term, periodically engaging students in activities to expand their knowledge of terms, having students discuss terms with each other, and involving students in games using the terms. The document then provides specific strategies for implementing each step of the process.

Uploaded by

Amir Abdullah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 13

Marzanos Six Step Process Teaching Academic Vocabulary

1. Provide a description, explanation, or example of the new term. (Include a non-linguistic representation of the term for ESL kids.) 2. Ask students to restate the description, explanation, or example in their own words. (Allow students whose primary existing knowledge base is still in their native language to write in it.) 3. Ask students to construct a picture, symbol, or graphic representing the word. 4. Engage students periodically in activities that help them add to their knowledge of the terms in their notebooks. 5. Periodically ask students to discuss the terms with one another. (Allow in native language when appropriate) 6. Involve students periodically in games that allow them to play with terms.

1. Provide a description, explanation, or example of the new term.


Looking up words in dictionaries is not useful for teaching vocab Provide a context for the term Introduce direct experiences that provide examples of the term Tell a story that integrates the term Use video as the stimulus for understanding information Ask students to investigate the term and present the information to the class (skit, pantomime, poster, etc.) Describe your own mental picture of the term Find or create pictures that explain the term

2. Ask students to restate the description, explanation, or example in their own words.
Monitor and correct misunderstandings Must be students original ideas, not parroting the teacher

3. Ask students to construct a picture, symbol, or graphic representing the word.


Model, model, model Provide examples of students drawings (and your own) that are rough but represent the ideas Play Pictionary Draw an example of the term Dramatize the term using speech bubbles Let them find a picture on the internet, if necessary

4. Engage students periodically in activities that help them add to their knowledge of the terms in their notebooks.
Highlight prefixes, suffixes, root words that will help them remember the meaning of the term Identify synonyms and antonyms for the term List related words Write brief cautions or reminders of common confusions Translate the term into another language for second language students Point out cognates to words in Spanish Write incomplete analogies for students to complete Allow students to write (or draw) their own analogies Sort or classify words Compare similarities and differences

5. Periodically ask students to discuss the terms with one another. Think-Pair-Share Compare their descriptions of the term Describe their pictures to one another Explain to each other any new information they have learned (ahas) Identify areas of disagreement or confusion and seek clarification Students can make revisions to their own work

6. Involve students periodically in games that allow them to play with terms.
Pictionary Oops (formerly known as Bang) Upset the fruit basket Memory Jeopardy (vocab words are on the board, players make up a question to define) Charades Name that Category ($100,000 Pyramid) Password Talk a Mile a Minute (like Catch Phrase) Bingo (you give definition, kid marks the word) Create a skit (assign groups of 3-4 kids 3 vocab words to make a skit out of) Swat Game (post 2 sets of words, kids on 2 teams compete to find words first and swat with fly-swatter)

BEFORE you begin your next UNIT of INSTRUCTION:


1. What Power Indicators (standards) are included in this Unit? List indicators. 2. What is the key academic vocabulary needed in this Unit? List words. Plan for direct vocab. instruction: (Marzanos 6 Steps for Teaching Vocab.) 1. YOU provide a description, explanation or example. (story, sketch, powerpoint) 2. Ask students to re-state or re-explain meaning in their own words. (journal, community circle, turn to your neighbor) 3. Ask students to construct a picture, graphic, or symbol for each word. 4. Engage students in activities to expand their word knowledge. (add to their notes, use graphic organizer format) 5. Ask students to discuss vocabulary words with one another. (collaborate) 6. Have student play games with the words. (Bingo w/definitions, Pictionary Charades, ) 3. Plan to provide or activate background knowledge: __ Study Trip __ Guest Speaker (expert) __ Bring In Live Sample __ Bring In Actual Artifacts __ Theme Day (Indian Day) __ __ __ __ __ Video (United Streaming) Posters Graphic Organizer Community Circle Topic Other __ __ __ __ Show Photos Models of Actual Items PowerPoint Read Aloud (story)

4. Now you are ready to plan your Units lessons, activities, and assessments.

Vocabulary Four Square

_______________________ _______________________ _______________________ Meaning Picture

_______________________

_______________________

_______________________ Word Sentence

Word __________________

Picture

____________ _________________________ Synonym _________


____________________ Antonym In my own words: ____________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Sentence _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________

Word __________________

Picture

____________ _________________________ Synonym _________


____________________ Antonym In my own words: ____________________________________________ _________________________________________________________ Sentence _________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________

Connect Two
Choose two words from your list. Describe to your partner or group how those two words are related. You all need to write how they are connected. Then your partner can choose two other words. Example:

and ___drenched____ are connected because a courteous person will share his umbrella so someone doesnt get drenched.___________

______Courteous_______

___________________________and

_________________ are connected because _____________________ ________________________________________ ________________________________________

__________________________and

__________________ are connected because _____________________ ________________________________________ ________________________________________

YES !

NO

Word

Context Clue Definition

Quick Draw

Connection

WEBSITES

Article on using student friendly definitions versus typical dictionary definitions.

http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/download/rs/10753/McKeown.LearningWordMeaning.p df?x-r=pcfile_d

This article discusses what it means to learn vocabulary and also a few ways promote vocabulary acquisition. The authors also talk about word consciousness.

http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/download/rs/10061/BaumannCh12%20(SchoolsMovingU p%20Showcase%201).pdf?x-r=pcfile_d

Browse our webinar archives, where you can watch and listen to full web presentations by leaders in the field of school improvement. Each archive includes questions, discussions, and accompanying resources from the live webinar.
http://www.schoolsmovingup.net/cs/smu/print/htdocs/smu/webinars/past.htm

Elfrieda Hiebert presentation on Strategic Vocabulary Selection: Choosing words for narrative and informational texts.
http://www.textproject.org/presentations/summer-2008-strategic-vocabulary-selection

Resource page from Illinois School District U-46 on academic vocabulary including links to activities and games.
http://www.u-46.org/roadmap/dyncat.cfm?catid=477

Reference site on the English language; word origins, Greek & Latin roots, historical development of English.
http://wordinfo.info/

Reference sites for word origins, synonyms, antonyms.


www.dictionary.com www.thesaurus.com

Example from a teacher of building background knowledge: Using a dresser analogy to teach the structure of informational text.
http://www.mail-archive.com/understand@literacyworkshop.org/msg00234.html

A verbatim transcript of a presentation given by Bob Marzano: What Works in Schools: A Research-Based Approach to School Improvement.
www.simulconference.com/ASCD/2003/scs/3170a.shtml

Click on the English Language Learners link to find more ideas about teaching academic vocabulary. Doing What Works website.
http://dww.ed.gov

BOOKS Accelerated Vocabulary Instruction Strategies for Closing the Achievement Gap for all Students by Nancy Akhavan; Scholastic, 2007.

Creating a Robust Word-Learning classroom, Includes ideas for read-aloud lessons & content areas, includes a packet of graphic organizer overheads.

Bringing Words to Life Robust Vocabulary Instruction by Isabel L. Beck, Margaret G. McKeown, & Linda Kucan; The Guilford Press, 2002.

Rationale for teaching vocabulary, how to choose words to teach (Tier 1, Tier 2, Tier 3), how to teach vocabulary.

Building Academic Vocabulary (Teachers Manual) by Robert Marzano & Debra J. Pickering; ASCD, 2005

Creating a list of academic vocabulary words how to teach them. Includes academic vocabulary word lists for content areas.

Building Background Knowledge for Academic Achievement Research on What Works in Schools by Robert Marzano; ASCD, 2004

Rationale for building background knowledge and how to build it. Includes lists of academic vocabulary for content areas.

Getting into Words Vocabulary Instruction that Strengthens Comprehension by Shira Lubliner; Paul H. Brookes Publishing, 2005.

Strategies to strengthen comprehension, develop metacognitive skills & build word knowledge. Includes cue cards for students in both English & Spanish.

Words, Words, Words Teaching Vocabulary in Grades 4-12 by Janet Allen, Stenhouse Publishers, 1999.

Developing effective practices in vocabulary instruction. Includes 22 effective graphic organizers to use.

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy