Harvard Education Letter
Home
For Subscribers Only
To Subscribe to HEL
Current Issue
Focus on Early Childhood Education
Past Issues
Resources by Topic


Search HEL's site
     
 

May/June 2008

Daniel Pallante, president of the Ohio Educational Development Center and founder of the Collaborative Language and Literacy Instruction Project (CLLIP), whose program has been used in Ohio schools for the past decade, helps teachers teach high-level words to children at different ages. Here are some of his guidelines for early vocabulary building:

Preschool: Teachers should pick out four to five Tier 2 words a week that relate to “big-time” concepts like “ocean,” which not only connect to children’s experiences but can be extended to touch on larger concepts and related words.

Kindergarten: As children get into word reading, it’s valuable to talk about the structure of words: how words—like block towers—can be taken apart or built from smaller pieces, and how that changes what they mean. He suggests concentrating on four to five words a week.

First grade: Children are ready to amplify their vocabulary learning by drawing inferences around six to seven target words each week.

Second grade: Students are ready to develop dictionary skills around seven to ten target words a week to begin to investigate multiple meanings.

Third grade: Students may target eight to ten new words weekly, extending their dictionary skills to think about which of a target word’s multiple meanings may be most relevant for a particular discussion.

For all students preK–3: Teachers should use interactive strategies to engage students. For example, if a story uses the word “risk,” a teacher might say, “I am going to give you some scenarios and if I describe one that is taking a risk, say, ‘Oh no!’” A teacher might then describe going swimming without a lifeguard (risky) and checking out a library book (not risky). Teachers can also send students home to find all the places a certain word turns up or make versions of Jeopardy to play in the classroom. “We have teachers who tell us they won’t read a book any more without doing these interactive strategies,” he says. “They say, ‘Otherwise it’s not fun for me or for the kids.’”

 
 

Copyright © 2000-2008 Harvard Education Letter
About Harvard Education Letter Special Article Series Contact Us Search Harvard Education Letter Harvard Education Publishing Group