ACADEMIC VOCABULARY

 
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Teaching Academic Vocabulary

The AWL Highlighter and the AWL Gapmaker are useful tools for developing teaching materials which focus on academic vocabulary, especially for mixed-discipline classes, since the words on the Academic Word List are valuable for all students preparing for academic study, no matter what their subject area.

One suggested procedure:

1. Select a suitable text and use it in class with your regular reading skills activities. Once students are familiar with the text, re-present it to your students, this time with all the words from the Academic Word List highlighted in bold, via the AWL Highlighter.

This simple step fosters noticing of the highlighted words as useful language items, whilst also providing an example of the target words in use. Students can use this highlighted version as a guide to which words are most useful for them, and so which words they should make an effort to learn. They can also be taught to look carefully, to see how a particular word is being used. For example, which preposition follows symbol? Is the verb commission used in an active or passive structure? Which adjective is used with the noun factor? Dictionary study and analysis of concordance lines can extend this by providing further examples of the word in context, allowing students to determine how a word is used typically, rather than in just the one instance. To reinforce their vocabulary study, students can be encouraged to generate their own sentences using the target words.

2. Several days later, review some of the academic words by means of a gapfill exercise, created with the AWL Gapmaker, based on the text previously studied. This could be in the form of a section of the text or a summary of the text.

This kind of exercise requires retrieval of the words learnt earlier, which reinforces memory, strengthening learning.

This procedure is based on the ideas of Nation as presented in his book Learning Vocabulary in Another Language (2001, CUP). He claims that three processes are necessary for successful vocabulary learning: noticing, retrieving and generating.

Practicalities

The AWL Highlighter
Once a text has been processed, it can be named and saved to your files as a web document. If you then open it in Word you will be able to adapt it as you wish, e.g. add title, instructions, etc.

The AWL Gapmaker
Fairly subtle grading of gapfill exercises is possible. For weaker classes you can select sublist 1 and 2 only and opt for a list of extracted words to be added. For stronger classes, you can use all sublists, which will result in more gaps, and remove the criblist, thus making a more challenging exercise from the same original text. Save and adapt as above.

 
 
 
© Sandra Haywood, University of Nottingham