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Teaching Key Academic Vocabulary to High School ELLs

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    Narrator: Funding for
    Common Core State Standards and ELLs
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    is provided by the American Teacher's
    Innovation Fund.
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    [upbeat acoustic guitar]
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    Anne Formato: Okay. Alright,
    so there's five words
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    that we're looking at today, guys.
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    The first we're looking at is prisoner.
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    Each day that my students enter the classroom,
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    they have, um, you know, three
    to five vocabulary words on the board.
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    Next one, this ones a hard one too, courtesy.
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    Okay? You got it? Courtesy.
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    [students mumbling]
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    Formato: Let's try that one again! Courtesy.
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    Male student: [laughing] Courtesy!
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    Formato: You got it! Okay!
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    If I do something nice for someone else,
    so if someone's walking in that door,
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    and I open the door, right?
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    And I say "Oh! Go first." Right?
    I'm giving them the courtesy.
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    I'm allowing them to go first.
    So I'm doing something nice for them.
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    Narrator: Anne Formato keeps her ELLs
    first exposure to new vocabulary relatively brief.
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    She will have the students continue to work
    with these new words in a meaningful way.
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    So that they can be more easily assimilated
    into the students vocabulary.
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    Formato: I don't just want them
    to have exposure to the words,
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    I actually want for them to use the words.
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    In part, because I want some sort of
    ownership with that.
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    I found that at the beginning of this year
    and at the beginning of last year,
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    when I was exposing them to vocabulary
    it was very easy for them to have this recoil
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    with the word, but then not be able to
    produce a sentence using that word.
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    A lot of it comes from this fear
    of sounding uneducated
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    and this fear sounding like
    they didn't know what they were doing
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    or they couldn't speak English
    or that they weren't intelligent.
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    But my students have a tendency
    to go back to what they're comfortable with.
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    So instead of using that tier two vocabulary
    or the academic vocabulary,
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    they really were falling back
    to the tier one words or s-talking around.
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    [whispering] So an occasion is an event
    that's something that's like important to you.
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    And Angie already put it in there,
    she used the word "important event"
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    which isn't here, but it's implied.
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    Because it's not just saying,
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    "Oh I went to a party-- I went to a movie--
    I went to whatever--"
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    "I went to a wedding--
    I went to like a sweet sixteen--
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    I went to a quinceañera."
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    So it's right there,
    and I like that. Perfect!
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    Okay, ocasion, same thing.
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    So cognate, you got it.
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    That was really good!
    That was the best one I've seen all day.
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    By having them write sentences and by
    having them write short answers using those words,
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    I know that they know the word
    and that they know how to use it
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    and they know what it means, and then
    having them feel more comfortable with it.
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    So it's a comfort thing
    and a knowledge thing, too.
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    Narrator: Ms. Formato chose today's five words
    based on what the students are about to read.
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    A letter from John Smith,
    about Pocahontas and her family.
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    This key vocabulary
    will help the students understand the text.
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    It also gives them more opportunities
    to interact with the new words.
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    Formato: Okay, yesterday,
    John Smith was saying that he had three loves.
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    Right? Does anybody remember what they were?
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    Male Student 2: Oh, I know.
    My God, my country, and my... my queen.
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    Formato: You got it. My God,
    my country, and my king.
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    And he put them in order, right?
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    Male Student 2: Yes.
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    Formato: Because he didn't believe that
    his king was above who? Who is the top for him?
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    Students: God.
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    Formato: God. God was number one, okay?
    And the last one was who?
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    Students: Country.
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    Formato: Country. Okay, so he started off,
    he talked to the queen.
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    Today we're gonna read the second paragraph.
    Okay? So if you already started that.
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    I'm gonna read this out loud to you and then
    we're gonna do a little bit of work on it.
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    He said, he started off,
    we already read the first paragraph.
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    In the second one he says,
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    "So it is that some ten years ago,
    being in Virginia--"
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    Okay, so he's writing this letter
    and he's looking back ten years.
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    So now he's in 1616, he's talking about 1606
    when he met Pocahotas, okay?
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    "And taken prisoner, by the power of Powhatan,
    their chief king. I received, I got--"
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    Okay so he's probably talking about
    what he got from King Powhatan.
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    "I got, from this great savage,
    exceeding great courtesy."
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    Okay? So he got--does he sound like he's mad?
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    He got exceeding great courtesy.
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    Male Student 1: No.
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    Formato: What does this mean,
    exceeding courtesy?
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    Kevin, what's?
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    Kevin: It is when somebody's good with you.
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    Formato: Yeah. Yeah! Like very good,
    nice treatment, right?
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    And we're gonna be-- we can always flip back
    onto the front, courtesy is like a nice gesture.
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    So you get a lot of nice gestures from him.
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    What I was doing was eliciting this,
    the vocabulary that was used within the text.
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    So, I was constantly asking them
    to use aca-- you know,
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    t-tier two and tier three level words,
    academic vocabulary.
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    So that their learning
    was constantly reinforced.
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    And, um, as we all know,
    through repeated exposure,
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    that's really-- and practicing--
    that's really how that,
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    that vocabulary gets from the page,
    into the memory.
Title:
Teaching Key Academic Vocabulary to High School ELLs
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
05:16

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