Thursday, July 9, 2009

Vocabulary Games

The link for this blog came from a Classroom 2.0 dicussion thread. Click on the title of this post to take you to Mark's Blog:

Vocabulary Review Games
June 25th, 2009 | Mark Pennington, MA Reading Specialist

Memorizing vocabulary words can present a problem for many students. Spending class time practicing vocabulary memorization may seem, on the surface, a waste of valuable time. After all, doesn’t memorization all come down to study and practice? True, but most of us did not leap out of the womb already knowing how to study and practice. In fact, many students have never learned how to study effectively, and many do not have home environments that are conducive to sufficient practice.

Good teachers know that we have to teach both content and process. The goal may be to get students to learn their vocabulary words (the content), but teaching a variety of study techniques to learn those vocabulary words helps students learn valuable critical thinking skills (the process). As a bonus, taking the time to model practice routines in the classroom will help instill habits that will carry over to homework.

Students are more likely to use study and practice procedures that are “game-like” and less boring than simple rote memorization. Here are some fun and effective vocabulary review games for groups and individuals in and out of the classroom. Check out Vocabulary Word Part Games for more.

Group Review Games

The Quick Picks Game

Divide your students into two groups and select one student as the host. Give the list of vocabulary words and definitions to the host for reference. Then, tell your students to take out their Vocabulary Study Cards for study and practice. Have the students spread out their cards on their desks word side up. The host announces the definition of one of the words and the students race to pick up the word that matches that definition. It is certainly fair for group members to help each other out. The first group with all students holding up the correct word part wins a point. Tell students to place each card word side down after it has been announced.. Once all words have been announced, reverse the procedure and announce definitions and students pick up the definition side up cards.

Vocabulary Millionaire

Divide your students into two groups and select one student as the host. Give the list of vocabulary words and definitions to the host for reference. Then, tell your students to take out their Vocabulary Study Cards for study and practice. Students stand next to their desks. The host flips a coin to determine which group goes first. The host announces a vocabulary word and the first student in the row must provide the definition. If the student is unsure of the definition, he or she may use a “lifeline” to ask another group member for assistance, but only once per game. If the student gets the definition correct, he or she remains standing; if incorrect, the student takes a seat and the next word goes to the opposing team. The team with the last student standing wins.

Concentration


Divide your students into groups of four and tell students to select two students whose printed Vocabulary Study Cards look very different from each other, so they can be easily separated. Have one of these students lay out the cards vocabulary word side up and the other student lay out the cards definition side up. Students choose cards to pair the vocabulary word with its definition. If a student selects a correct match, that student chooses again; if not, the next student selects, etc. The winner has the most matches.

Baseball


The teacher needs to assign each vocabulary word according to difficulty, from easy to hard, as a single, double, triple, or home run. Hint: Have many more singles cards than the others. Divide your students into two teams and establish four bases. When in the field, students sit in seats; when “up,” the students stand in line waiting their turn to bat. Teacher selects a single, double, triple, or home run card. Then, the teacher announces the vocabulary word and the batter must give the definition within five seconds or the batter is out. Mix it up by giving definitions and having students come up with the matching vocabulary words. Three outs per each team per inning. Select a student to serve as scorekeeper, and have that student keep the team scores on the board.

Individual Review Games


Knock-Out


Have all students stand and quiz each student with a vocabulary word or definition. If the student gets it right within five seconds, the student remains standing; if not, the student sits. Last one standing wins the game.

Vocabulary Puzzles

Pass out light color construction paper, rulers, and scissors to each student. Tell your students that they will use their Vocabulary Study Cards to make a jigsaw puzzle with the pieces matching words with their definitions. Depending upon the shape of the jigsaw puzzle piece, that piece may have multiple words and/or definitions.

Directions
1. Draw jigsaw puzzle lines on one side of light color construction paper so that you can fit the word parts and their definitions. Avoid small puzzle pieces.

2. Print the word part in dark pen or pencil at the edge of one puzzle piece and its matching definition at the edge of another puzzle piece that touches it, just like the model shows. Finish labeling the puzzle.

3. Cut out the puzzle pieces and place the word parts and their matching definitions face down on your desk. Put together the puzzle.

4. Label other word parts and their definitions on the blank side of the puzzle. You now have created two separate Vocabulary Puzzles.

5. Have students place their puzzles in zip-lock baggies to store. The baggies can be hole-punched to place in three-ring binders.

To Play


Have students race along with the clock to set their own world puzzle completion records. Students can also exchange puzzles and race each other.

For Greek and Latin affixes/roots worksheets, spelling-vocabulary games, vocabulary lists, vocabulary flashcards, spelling rules with memorable raps and songs on CD, spelling tests, syllable practice, and more to differentiate spelling and vocabulary instruction, please check out Teaching Spelling and Vocabulary at www.penningtonpublishing.com.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

EMBED GOOGLE CALENDAR IN YOUR BLOG

A question was asked about adding a calendar with your information to the blog. You can add this to your blogs by clicking on 'Add a Gadget' and doing a search for 'Google Link Bookmarks', and then adding it.

After you have added the Bookmarks to your blog, click on 'Calendar' from the Links, and you will get a Google Calendar.  Create the information you want in that calendar, and then copy the Google Calendar URL into a 'Blog List' Gadget.  As you make changes to the Google calendar, they should automatically appear on your calendar link on the blog site.

Let me know if this works for you. I tried it from my account, and put a link to the calendar I created in the right column. You'll need to add the URL from your account calendar link to put in your own calendar.

Other Blogs to Try

In the right column of this page, I've added some of the blogs from this group, and linked to the group blog from Monday. I also added a couple of my blogs so you can see some different elements. This was done by going to 'Add a Gadget', choosing 'Blog Lists' and typing in the URLs. A key point is that you MUST add the 'http://' to the URL when you add it to the list.

If you run across other blogs you may want to add to this list, your administrators for this blog are:
Judith Sotir jsotir@waubonsee.edu and Michelle Wargo wargomb@sbcglobal.net

I've made you all administrators in case you are interested in adding gadgets or developing this blog. You can post or comment to any of the posts listed. I will monitor this blog for a while, so if any questions come up, just put them in a post.

If I come up with additional information or ideas, I'll post them as well.

Welcome to the Blogsphere!

More sites to try

I realized how different the K-8 environment is regarding social networking sites,where blogs and wikis fall under. The two below are developed for education:

http://pbworks.com/academic.wiki This is a site that would keep student work safe, and is especially designed for educational use.
http://www.wikispaces.com/site/for/teachers

These two are academic blog sites (if regular blog sites do not control at the level you seek)http://www.21classes.com/shop/features
http://www.educationworld.com/a_tech/techtorial/techtorial037print.shtml

Additional resources for finding and creating blogs, and adding embedded materials to blogs:
http://mrssmoke.onsugar.com/3082114
http://www.scribd.com/doc/13856639/Helpful-Resources-for-Finding-and-Creating-Education-Blogs
http://widgetbox.com Additional widgets and gadgets to add

Thank you!

Thank you all for being so patient considering the problems that came up. I will add additional posts to this site and answer questions that come up. I'll check on getting sites with more controls for instructors, however, blogs and wikis are all rather similar, and once you have some experience creating with Blogger, you can easily transfer those skills to another site if necessary.

I hope that you all continue to use this blog as a group, and share your experiences (good and bad) with the others.

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

thinking deeply ????

I am getting throughly confused, but need to play more with this blogging.

I finally got invited!!!!!

Thank you for the invite!
I love this!
Jennifer

Summer

Hi Josie,
Hope your summer is going well. Thanks for all your end of the year help.
Diane Argueta

Very Cool

This is an idea I can use.
Bryan

Blogging Workshop

Very informative. Thanks for the practical advice and wealth of info in the handouts. Efficient use of time.

Top 10 strategies

1) KWL
2) Venn Diagram