English Language Development

(Elliott) #1

  • Teach words: They are selective about which words to teach, generally targeting those that
    require more than a synonym for explanation, are vital to understanding of a concept or text,
    and have high applicability—in other words, general academic (Tier 2) words. They highlight
    relationships among words and ensure students have multiple exposures to target words,
    including through opportunities to use them in writing, discussions, hand-on experiences, and in
    the development of oral, visual, and multimedia presentations.

  • Teach word-learning strategies: Teachers teach students
    to use word parts (i.e., roots and affixes, especially Greek
    and Latin affixes and roots), context, and resources (e.g.,
    dictionaries) to determine the meanings of words.

  • Support students to develop language awareness: Teachers
    create many opportunities for whole class, small group,
    and paired discussions about how language works to make
    meaning. These discussions about language move beyond
    the word level (vocabulary) and into grammatical structures,
    the ways sentences are linked together in different type so
    texts through text connectives (e.g., The next day... , As a
    result... ,), and how different text types are structured and
    organized.
    A special target of instruction in grade four is the use of Greek and Latin affixes and roots as clues
    to the meaning of a word (L.4.4b). Because more than 60 percent of English is drawn from Greek
    and Latin, learning Greek and Latin word parts has an exponential effect on vocabulary development.
    See figure 5.10 for examples. (Lists can be found online; see, for example, McEwan’s article on the
    Reading Rockets Web site 2013, http://www.readingrockets.org/article/40406.)) Instruction should
    focus on the roots and affixes that are most applicable to students’ studies and experiences.


Figure 5.10. Greek and Latin Roots


Greek Latin

Root Meaning Examples Root Meaning Examples

astro star astronaut
astronomy

dict to speak,
to tell

dictate
predict
contradict

tele far, distant telephone
telescope
telecommunicate

port to carry export
import
support

auto self autograph
automobile
automatic

struct to build, to
form

construct
destruct
structure

micro small microscope
microphone

vid, vis to see vision
television
visible

Because more than 60
percent of English is
drawn from Greek and
Latin, learning Greek
and Latin word parts
has an exponential
effect on vocabulary
development.

428 | Chapter 5 Grade 4

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