Read Ch. 10 & 12 and 1 chapter of choice

Week 4 Hutchins

Week 4 Hutchins

by Jennifer hutchins -
Number of replies: 3

Word work is something they learn in primary grades… but is it?

No.  Learning words is constant. Even at my age I am learning new words and often I tell my students I am not a human dictionary and there are words in context that I need to learn as well.  

-How do we support students who did not master “breaking the code”?  

I really liked the pages on scaffolding using semantic mapping.  I liked the idea of giving a student a word to break down and then doing a carousel activity to look at new words. We do a research unit in which the students pick their own topics. Their is a wide variety of choice and I think it would be helpful to have a day of word work where we do semantic mapping to help them understand words they do not know.  

-What did you learn in this chapter and how will you apply it to your instruction?

I learned about the different types of scaffolding and explained how i will apply it. I am going to dedicate one day a week to a small amount of word work as well, and during some of my units pull small groups for word work especially students who struggle as readers.  

-Name & Summarize (a few sentences) about the “other” chapter you read.

I have issues with reading chapters out of sync so I simply read chapter 11 on scaffolding for vocabulary acquisition.  I liked the various types of maps that she showed us and plan to use them in my classroom to further help students expand their use of vocabulary.  


In reply to Jennifer hutchins

Re: Week 4 Hutchins

by Erin Gray -
I too had to include chapter 11 and found it quite beneficial with the multiple scaffolds to preteach vocab. I will definitely be incorporating these into our Word Work block along with allowing students to discuss their findings for them to build off of.
In reply to Jennifer hutchins

Re: Week 4 Hutchins

by Aimee Harkness -
I also had to read chapter 11 for this reason! I enjoyed the maps as well and plan to do more of this with math vocabulary in my classroom.