Python Notes for mca i year students osmania university.docx
Session 6
1. Competency 2
Component # 1-013-311
Center for Professional Learning
Session 6
Instructor: Carmen S. Concepcion
readingsetgo.blogspot.com
Application of Research-Based Instructional
Practices
Reading … Set … Go
2. Who’s In the Room?
Drove the furthest to get here?
Born west of the Mississippi?
Knows whether Miami is closer to Tallahassee or
to Cuba?
Knows who planned Miami Beach?
Been an educator for under 5 year? 5 to 10
years? 11 to 20 20 years? 20 and over?
Is in education as a second career?
Knows the words to “Yellow Submarine?
Has attended an IRA or FRA conference?
Knows what fcrr.org stands for? (in education)
3. Share Investigative Activity
List three things you learned about
vocabulary instruction
What instructional practice will you
MOST likely use in your classroom?
Why?
What instructional practice would you be
LEAST likely to use? Why?
4. Key Ideas
1. A Focus on Vocabulary
2. What is Vocabulary?
3. The Importance of Vocabulary to Reading
Comprehension
4. How Many Words Do Students Need to Know?
5. What Does It Mean to “Know a Word?
5. Why Teach Vocabulary?
Vocabulary is important in oral reading
instruction.
Word knowledge is critical to comprehension.
“Beginning readers use their oral vocabulary to
make sense of the words they see in print.
Readers must know what most words mean
before they can understand what they are
reading.”
6. Interesting Research Facts
Research demonstrates that children learn most words
indirectly, through reading, writing, listening, and talking.
We have 2 mental vocabularies: phonological (we use when we
listen and talk) and orthographic ( we use when we read and
write).
By age 6, most children have an oral vocabulary of up to 14,000
words.
High school graduates know 45,000 words.
Until 30, we learn about 3,500 new words a year, for a total of
about 100,000 words.
The fact that an individual’s vocabulary may increase from
14,000 words at age 6 to 100,000 words as an adult means
many words are learned through active language use rather
than explicit instruction.
Children who do not think about or use a word after initial
instruction are unlikely to add it to their vocabulary repertoire.
7. Vocabulary Trends
First– grade children from higher socioeconomic
groups know about twice as many words as lower
socioeconomic children.
High–knowledge third graders have vocabularies
about equal to lowest performing 12th graders
High school seniors near the top of their class
know about four times as many words as their
lower-performing classmates.
Once established, differences in vocabulary
knowledge appear difficult to ameliorate.
8. Assessing Vocabulary
We could ask the child to :
Read the word and circle a picture of it.
Look at a picture and circle the word for it.
Read the word and circle a definition.
Read the word and circle a synonym.
Read the word and circle an antonym.
Read the word in context and circle a definition, synonym,
or antonym.
Read a sentence and write the missing word.
Read a sentence and supply the missing word orally.
Read the word and draw a picture or tell about it.
Read the word and put it in a category.
Find the word in a category in which it doesn’t belong.
9. Eight Guidelines for
Vocabulary Instruction
Extended periods of instructional time must be devoted
to vocabulary growth.
Students should have multiple exposures to a word to
learn it well.
Independent reading should be encouraged and
facilitated.
Words important to the understanding of the text
(passage-critical words) should be directly taught.
Word learning must be active.
Word study activities facilitate vocabulary growth.
Relating new words to students’ background
experiences contribute to vocabulary growth.
Phonic analysis, structural analysis, and contextual
10. Vocabulary Growth
Teachers need to devote instructional time to
vocabulary growth.
Extended periods of time devoted to vocabualry
instruction will ensure better understanding of
words.
Read aloud to students and discuss the selection
before, during, and after you read.
Teachers should foster word consciousness and
encourage students to play with words by
engaging them in word play.
11. Importance of Reading &
Vocabulary?
“You can’t build a vocabulary without reading. You
can’t make friends if you never meet anybody, but
stay with yourself all of the time. In the same way,
you can’t build up a vocabulary if you never meet
any new words. And to meet them, you must
read. The more you read, the better. A book a
week is good, a book every other day is better, a
book a day is still better. There is no upper limit.
Keep on reading. Keep on meeting unfamiliar
words on printed pages. Keep on getting
acquainted with the faces of words.”
12. Independent Reading
Teachers should encourage and facilitate
independent reading. W.E. Nagy, 1988, Teaching
vocabulary to improve reading comprehension
Amount of Time Spent Reading and Reading Achievement of 5th
graders
What are the implications for instruction?
Percentile Rank Minutes of
Reading Per Day
Estimated
of words read
year
98
90
70
50
20
10
90.7
40.4
21.7
12.9
3.1
1.6
4,733,000
2,357,000
1,168,000
601,000
134,000
51,000
13. Passage Critical Words
Teachers should directly teach passage-critical
words.
Teachers do not need to teach every unknown
word.
Teach the words important to the understanding
of the text or words that students are likely to
encounter again.
This is in contrast to the grade level word list
method which is predominate in schools because
this method treats all word as if they are integral
to the understanding to text.
Teach only 8 or 10 words per week.
15. Strategic Activities for
Vocabulary growth
Vocab Bookmark
Predicting the message
Concept Definitions Map
Word Chain
Analogy Theater
SHOW AND TELL
Word Bank
16. For the next class…
Read: FLaRE Professional Paper – Vocabulary
Complete GIST Summary
17. GIST Summary
Read 3-5 paragraphs of text.
Capture a summary in a sentence of exactly 20
words.
Repeat with the next 3-5 paragraphs. The second
gist statement becomes a combination of the
material in the first gist statement and the new
material. However, the second statement is still
limited to exactly 20 words.
Editor's Notes
Miami to Tallahassee is 480.78 miles
Miami to Cuba -it is 90 miles from the end of Florida (Key West) to Cuba; Key West is about 130 miles from Miami; so it is about 220 - 230 miles from Miami to Cuba (about 200 nautical miles).
Year 1870Henry and Charles Lum purchase 165 acres on South Beach for 75 cents acre for the purpose of planting and harvesting coconuts.
Year 1896John Collins arrives from New Jersey to survey his land on Miami Beach.
Year 1913Carl Fisher arrives in Miami Beach. He too has a vision for the island--a city existing in an of itself - not as an adjunct to the established city of Miami across the bay.
YELLOW SUBMARINE lyrics (Lennon/McCartney)In the town where I was bornLived a man who sailed to seaAnd he told us of his lifeIn the land of submarinesSo we sailed up to the sunTill we found the sea of greenAnd we lived beneath the wavesIn our yellow submarineWe all live in a yellow submarineYellow submarine, yellow submarineWe all live in a yellow submarineYellow submarine, yellow submarine
International Reading Association: April Orlando
Florida Reading Association
3:00 partner
Have Participants read pages 3 – 11 of the PREl : A Focus on Vocabulary”.
Discuss the reading
Chart “ Key ideas” either whole group or individually.
Have participants fill in the blanks on Handout S7- 2 as you review the highlights of vocabulary research from Slide S7- 6.
Have participants turn to a shoulder partner and discuss how any or all of these points impact their instruction of vocabulary. Do these trends surprise them? Why or why not?
This is a list of ways to asses vocabualry growth. Ask the participants to read the suggestions. Does this make sense and is it a process they could easily integrate with their current vocabualry activities? How? Share out.
Share with class
Ask for verbal reflections, confirmations, implications for instruction.
Have participants read quote.
Share their thoughts on how this quote relates to their classroom practice.
Much recent research has confirmed that students who read widely and often, especially starting at a young age, experience the highest vocabulary growth.
Have participants read quote.
Share their thoughts on how this quote relates to their classroom practice.
Much recent research has confirmed that students who read widely and often, especially starting at a young age, experience the highest vocabulary growth.
Introduce vocabulary with definitions that are more complex before reading the material.
Teaching students how to learn meanings by themselves. Some specific word learning strategis include:
Use of other reference material,
Use of word parts to decipher unfamiliar words, and
Use of context clues to figure out meanings.
Explain to participants that these are specific strategic activities they may choose to use with their students.
Briefly go through the activities for their orientation and explain that they will be choosing two or three to use in the classroom.
Group according to candy choice, explain how