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Text
Citation or Link
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Rationale
for Choosing
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Text
Frame(s)
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Strategies
Used and Resource
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Engagement
Example
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This article looks at constant and
average speed and then discusses the Doppler Effect. This article would be
valuable for a vocabulary overview guide because of the difficulty that can
results between understanding constant and average speeds.
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Concept/ Definition
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Vocabulary Overview Guide (Buehl book)
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Vocabulary Overview Guide
is a reading comprehension strategy that students can undertake by selecting new
or difficult vocabulary as they are reading and then setting them aside to
explore the meaning of these words in more detail. By making students
comprehend new vocabulary, we as teachers can improve their literacy and help
students grow and conquer new material while working through new concepts.
One way that students can
learn more effectively is by creating Vocabulary Overview Guides where students
can preview terms that they will encounter in their article readings and start
to draw connections to the definitions of these terms. The goal of this
strategy is help students see that learning new vocabulary is more than simply
looking up terms in the dictionary and it can be engaging. Furthermore, when
students are engaged in the vocabulary learning process, material becomes much
more retainable rather than if students were to just study vocabulary terms for
a test and then forget their meaning later. Another advantage of vocabulary
overview guides is that students can work together and share their associations
of words with their definitions, which could help students who struggle with
vocabulary to create new connections and ways to remember terms.
In my experience, getting
a preview of new terms before reading activities allowed me to consider what
material I was going to learn and it also forced me to read the sections
containing new or difficult terminology more in depth which usually would lead
to a much better understanding of the concepts in the end. By using this process to introduce new
material to students, they can start to take ownership of the learning of new
vocabulary.
The lesson that I have in
mind would use this article in class and have students read through the
vocabulary overview guide before students read the lesson. The Vocabulary
Overview Guide for this article would include the terms: constant speed,
average speed, velocity, frequency, and Doppler Effect. Then I would include
clues for each term and then leave a blank space where students could guess the
definition and then adjust their guess after reading the article.
After reading the
article, I would discuss these terms with the students to work through them. I would either have students use group discussion to
work through these terms or come together as a class based on what I feel is
appropriate within the class and how the students have handle new vocabulary
previously.
This reading strategy
would be effective because while this article is very straightforward and the
vocabulary seems simple besides the Doppler Effect, the strategy could be
difficult for more complex articles and readings. The mathematical
understanding that comes from this physics concept are difficult to comprehend
and average and constant speed could be troubling for some students. The
mathematics behind this can make it easier for students to relate to the
differences between average and constant. Hopefully they can work together
through the material to understand this difference and draw some conclusions
about sound travel and speed.
References
Buehl, D. (2013). Classroom strategies for
interactive learning (4th ed.). Newark, DE: International Reading
Association.
Eisenkraft, A. (2010). Active physics: A
project-based inquiry approach (3rd ed.). Mount Kisco, NY: It's About Time.
Reid, I think this is a good strategy to use because it gives students concepts to focus on while reading the text. It also allows them to see what they are learning from the text and put concepts into their own words. I wonder if there is a way to expand this strategy so that it allows for a little bit more creative thinking on the part of the students. You might consider challenging students to explore how these vocabulary words apply to their own lives beyond the article, finding examples of each.
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