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Classroom VignetteWord Study: Ways to Captivate Reluctant Learners
by Mary Jo Fresch, Ohio State University at Marion, Marion,
Ohio
Think of the middle and high school students you know. Which activity do you suppose
they would choose?
Activity A: Read the following two stories. They are "word histories." Tell
these stories to two classmates. Listen to eight other stories about words from
classmates. Add those words to this sheet (be certain to spell them correctly),
and record a few key words to remember their history.
- coconut― Portuguese and Spanish explorers landed on tropical
islands and found that the palm trees dropped "pods" that contained a large nut
that appeared to have a face on it. Using the Portuguese word, they called it coco, meaning "grimace." English explorers adapted the
word and made it the compound word coconut. We have
used this word since the early 1600s.
- expedition― This word has its beginnings in the Latin prefix
ex- (meaning "out"...think of the word
exit) and ped- (meaning "foot"...think of
the word pedal). At first it meant to "free one's foot"
from a snare or trap. The idea of freeing oneself to go forward was used by the
military in the seventeenth century. The word came to mean a long, organized journey,
the purpose of which is determined by a particular need. (When you tell this story,
see if you and your classmates can determine how expedite
is related.)
Activity B: Memorize the spelling and definition of the following ten words:
- coconut― "The fruit of the coconut palm that is a drupe consisting
of an outer fibrous husk that yields coir and a large nut containing the thick edible
meat and, in the fresh fruit, a clear fluid called coconut milk." (Webster's
Third New International Dictionary, 1993, p. 437).
- ...and so on.
If your students are like the students I know, they pick Activity A because:
- It involves talking. (Need I say more?)
- It employs peer teaching rather than teacher preaching.
- It helps to create memories about words,
which have greater impact on long-term memory, especially for students who are usually
challenged to memorize isolated units of information.
Word study is an across-the-curriculum activity that not only expands vocabulary,
but also teaches content. So, how can we add these word histories to our students'
repertoire?
Begin by looking at the words you regularly teach as vocabulary, and determine which
ones lend themselves to exploration of word histories. There are many excellent
resources for finding these (see Appendix A). And you do not have to be the sole
"finder" of these stories. Providing students with print and online resources to
find word histories is just as instructive to them and adds that peer talk strategy
to the work.
Next, use words from your content area to create word webs and activities that show
relationships between words. I like to play "Find your family" with my preservice
teachers as a way to create small groups (I never "count off" in a literacy class).
Any related words can be printed on cards and passed out to students, who then hunt
for their words' "relatives." After the group is formed, we review the family relationships
before moving on to a small-group activity. For instance, I might use the
vis, vid (Latin, meaning "to see") family with video, visual,
visible, and visor to create a group
of four. Some science "families" might be thermo (heat),
scop (watch), bio (life),
and hypno (sleep). Social studies could use
geo (earth), port (carry), acro
(height), and vol (turn). Language arts might use graph or scribe (one is Greek,
one is Latin, both meaning "to write"), nym (name),
and dict (speak). Math has many, such as
cent (hundred), meter (measure),
quad (four), and forma (shape). A natural
extension is to create webs with these roots on posters, which can be continually
added to as students find more relatives in their reading. Think of multiple words
from your area that have a meaning connection. When sharing the families, you can
make the point that words that are related in meaning are related in spelling. In
fact, using that knowledge can help students who are stumped by a spelling. "Gee,
I can easily write bombard, so the word
bomb must have a b at the end even if I don't
hear it."
Another activity that students enjoy is one I call "You complete me." The name of
the activity makes a point― you can't just memorize the spelling or meaning of a
word and "know" it. There are actually three important aspects of a word: (1) the
word, (2) its definition, and (3) its language of origin (and what that word meant
in the original language). For instance, (1) a ballad
is (2) a popular song that is generally narrative and suitable
for singing and is (3) from the French word balade,
meaning "dancing song." I put these three parts on separate cards and have the students
find each other to complete the information about a word. The group of three shares
its completed set with the larger group. I have the information on overheads so
everyone gets a visual of the set as the parts are revealed. I'm always impressed
with how much of this information the students remember weeks later.
Word sorting is an important strategy for developing word knowledge. This active,
hands-on strategy utilizes the brain's natural penchant to sort. You can create
open or closed sorts, depending on your purpose and population. The closed sort
has key words that are the known categories the students use to sort the remaining
words. This is useful when you are dealing with difficult language concepts or if
you have an inclusion classroom with students needing guidance in such work. An
open sort allows the students to decide on the categories. As long as they can justify
their groupings, you accept them. Of course, you can always ask them to re-sort
using key words if they are missing the point you want to make. For instance, students
could be given words such as chateau, cholesterol, chalk, chain,
character, chaos, chief, chandelier, chemistry, and charlatan.
The categories are the three sounds of ch. Once the
categories are established, take the next step and ask them why does
ch have these three different sounds? Chalk
is from the Old English sound of ch, chateau is from
the French, and chaos is from the Greek. This explains
the reason we have three sounds for ch; words came to
us from different languages. This also explains most of those words we used to say
were "exceptions." In fact, 84 percent of English is predictable when you understand
patterns and histories.
One other way to utilize word histories is introducing eponyms related to content
studies. These are words that come from people's names. Our content areas abound
with them: Fahrenheit, Celsius, boycott, leotard, raglan, sandwich,
derrick, Braille― the list goes on. Try to find cross-curricular stories
that students will love to repeat (this is the sort of gossip I buy into!). Telling
the story of silhouette is a good example of this. Etienne
de Silhouette was a French finance minister during the mid-1700s. While it was tradition
for aristocrats to have their children's portrait done, Silhouette, being a man
of finance, did not want to spend the money for an oil painting. So he asked the
artist to simply outline the children's features. (This is one explanation― there
are others.) Art, history, and commerce all merge in this one story! And speaking
of the class system, many of our multiple words that mean the same thing are due
to invasions, the plague, and a large peasant population. Until the Norman conquests
in 1066, the peasants spoke a Germanic-based language. The aristocracy spoke French
(which is Latin-based). Thus, two complete languages joined, and "English" was born.
So a poor farmer ate chicken (Germanic roots), but a
rich aristocrat had poultry (French roots). The noble
class would perspire (French) or exude
(Latin), but the peasants would sweat (Germanic). This
is the number one way to kick those essays up a notch― get beyond the Germanic and
explore the equivalent French or Latin root word. Rather than having your character
ask (Germanic), he could question
(French) or interrogate (Latin). This takes some word
webbing and discussions to move beyond the "common," because the 100 most frequently
spoken words we use every day are Germanic; and of the next 100, 83 are Germanic.
It is also fun to look at the nuances of language. Headlines help us teach how the
arrangement of words and multiple meanings of the same word can throw off a reader.
Some headlines I have collected are:
"Something Went Wrong in Jet Crash, Experts Say" (Gee, you think?)
"Iraqi Head Seeks Arms" (How's he doing on those legs?)
"Stolen Painting Found by Tree" (That is one smart tree!)
"If Strike Isn't Settled Quickly, It May Last a While" (Now there's an observation!).
Students will enjoy the ways these can be read and interpreted. I shared a few of
these with some middle school students, and soon after they were searching the paper
each day to find one of their own. Oddly enough, they even read many of the articles!
So, of course, we had to write a better headline once
we actually knew the content. I know, it was a sneaky way to get them to pick up
the paper, but it worked!
We need to explore (not memorize) the English language
to find these rich stories, relationships, and historical roots. We provide for
every student, no matter how reluctant, a new way to look at spelling and vocabulary.
And we share one of the essential human needs― storytelling in social settings.
Dr. Mary Jo Fresch is an Associate Professor in the School of Teaching and Learning,
College of Education and Human Ecology, at Ohio State University at Marion. She
currently teaches literacy and children's literature courses to preservice and in-service
teachers. Her research interests focus on how children learn the specifics of the
English language for purposes of spelling, vocabulary, and reading. She has also
taught in teacher education programs at the University of Nebraska and Deakin University
in Melbourne, Australia (where she lived for three years). She has written and spoken
internationally on literacy-related topics.
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