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Teach Your Child
Strategies for Vocabulary Words
Ann Logsdon
Vocabulary skills can make or break any student's
feelings about reading.
Help students with learning disabilities successfully
deal with new vocabulary in ways
that empower their future learning with these strategies.
These strategies can be adapted
for appropriately for different grade levels and are
easily done at home or school.
They can be used by regular and special education students.
Difficulty: Average
Time Required: This
Reading Skill Can be Taught in Approximately 20 Minutes
Here's How:
Decoding and
Listening to Vocabulary Words:
Provide the student with a list of new vocabulary
words that will appear in a passage.
Have the student sound the word out loud. Read it aloud
to her if she does not read phonetically. Ask the student if the word sounds
like other words she knows.
Do parts of the word suggest what it means?
Gleaning for Clues
to Understanding:
Have the student read the sentences surrounding the new
word.
Do the sentences give the student an idea of the meaning
of the word?
Ask her to make suggestions about the meaning. For
younger students,
provide visual depictions of the words whenever possible
though illustrated books.
Create a Personal
Dictionary:
Provide students a list of new vocabulary words from the
passage.
Older students can scan the passage and make their own
lists of unfamiliar vocabulary.
Have students create their own personal dictionary by
looking up words
and writing the definitions in a notebook.
For younger students, consider having them also draw an
illustration of the words as appropriate.
Have students occasionally review their personal word
lists to reinforce their learning.
Skip It:
Sometimes it is best to allow students to read passages
and simply skip words they cannot decode or read.
Consider having students make a slight mark by words they
do not know and continue reading.
This allows them to finish the passage without disrupting
the flow of text.
Have them address the words they missed after they are
finished reading the passages.
hey can address them using the strategies above
at that time.
Tips:
It is a good practice to teach students these skills as
they are learning to read.
This helps them to understand strategies as a good way to
deal with reading
before problems occur.
They will recognize this as good practice and not a
treatment for a learning problem.
For students who have already learned to read, it may be
helpful to teach them
the strategies apart from a reading activity. Later,
as they read, casually remind them
of the strategies if they appear to struggle and do not
seem to use them.
Pair this strategy with other research-based
strategies from your Learning Disabilities Guide
for more success in school.
What You Need:
Age-appropriate Dictionary
Notebook
Writing Supplies
Coloring Pencils (for younger students)
http://learningdisabilities.about.com/od/instructionalmaterials/ht/nwvocabinreadin.htm
You can TCR specialist
and language dictionaries that are spontaneously
accessed.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what
I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve
read.
A
practical overview of
Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
How to choose a
book. A Turbo Charged
Reading YouTube
Emotions
when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
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To quote the Dr Seuss
himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the
more places you'll go.”
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