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Deepening Comprehension with Six Steps of Vocabulary Instruction

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STEP 1:
EXPLAIN

STEP 2:
RESTATE

STEP 3:
SHOW

STEP 4:
DEVELOP

STEP 5:
REFINE

STEP 6:
PLAY

Address NEW WORDS

Recognize the power of vocabulary in comprehension

Use the island graphic to represent the 5 components of reading instruction.  Vocabulary instruction resides on the Island of Comprehending.

Define reader voices

For intermediate grades, use the Beats™ Headphone graphic.

Use toilet paper tubes for students to whisper their Thinking Voice thoughts into.

Provide 4 TYPES of Vocabulary Instruction

#1 Target incidental words

Help students determine the meaning of unfamiliar words using context clues

Provide a daily dose of context clues practice with the Vocabulary Cartoon of the Day series.

#2 Teach Greek & Latin roots

Apply the generative principle to root study

Any word part that carries meaning is called a “root.” Therefore, prefixes, suffixes, and bases are all examples of roots. Teach students to look “inside” the word to solve new words for meaning by looking for known Greek/Latin roots.

Create an anchor chart with the word part, a visual, and words that contain that root.
Smartboard | PDF | PPT
PPT Template | Student Examples

In each slice, students include a pictorial representation of the word and a student-friendly sentence that describes the word’s meaning.
Template | Anchor Papers | Smartboard

Provide students words to break into parts for the word equation followed by an example sentence reflecting its meaning.
Example | Template

#3 Define general-academic words

Recognize the power in academic vocabulary

Select 10-15 words per grade level

Blank Template PDF | Word

#4 Prioritize domain-specific terms

Identify core vocab for each subject area

Dr. Robert Marzano’s research, and that of numerous other vocabulary experts, reveals that students must interact with a single word numerous times. (Different researchers claim 12-17 exposures.) To ensure academic success, prioritize the academic vocabulary most worthy of that level of instructional time.

Follow a process for identifying core vocabulary words per subject area.

Grade-level lists: Publisher | PDF
Content-area lists: Publisher | PDF

Include subject-specific verbs with content-area lists.

Julie Meitzler, principal at Bluffton Harrison Elementary (Bluffton, IN) shared the lists her teachers created.

Math
PK | K | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

English Language Arts
PK | K | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Academic/Functional
K | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Click below to access resources for each of Marzano’s 6 steps.

STEP 1:
EXPLAIN

STEP 2:
RESTATE

STEP 3:
SHOW

STEP 4:
DEVELOP

STEP 5:
REFINE

STEP 6:
PLAY