Vocabulary
What
and why?
Vocabulary
is possibly the single most important area in language learning.
With a large vocabulary, a person can communicate effectively even
though he/she may be very weak in grammatical knowledge. In CEWw,
vocabulary development is thus emphasised. This is achieved through
various vocabulary-related exercises, the students' LANGUAGE
RECORDS and the HELP
YOURSELF LIST (or Ideas list) in the Student's Book,
and the Vocabulary maps (from CEWw 3 onwards). It
can be expected, however, that the students' passive knowledge of
vocabulary (their understanding) will always be greater than their
active abilities (what they are able to produce). The same is likely
to be true in the mother tongue.
Practical
ideas
- Writing
vocabulary puzzles for an EXERCISE
BOX, for a PARCEL
OF ENGLISH or for their partner gives students time to absorb
new words.
- Encourage
students to compare new words with translations in the MOTHER
TONGUE.
- Encourage
students to guess new words in texts.
- Show
the students how they can use a dictionary. This will help them
build up their vocabulary outside of class time.
- Students
can be put into small groups to test each other on vocabulary
or to devise a vocabulary test for the class.
- For
each Theme, the students could gradually construct a large vocabulary
puzzle. Decide in advance with the students what kind you will
make Ð for example, a word search (with words hidden in a square
of letters), an acrostic (where words run down through one long
word), a traditional crossword puzzle or a circular puzzle (where
the last letter of one word is the first letter of the next) -
and put the plan on the wall. During the two or three weeks of
the Theme each student puts a clue on the puzzle. At the end of
the Theme, students write the clues and the blank puzzle in their
books and do the puzzle together.
- 'I
spy' is a lively vocabulary game which younger students like playing.
One student says 'I spy with my little eye something beginning
with "w".' The object must be in the room. Students
guess. The one to get it right has the next turn.

Researching
the classroom
-
Most
research suggests that it is far easier to learn vocabulary
in 'chunks' of meaning than as isolated words. This is one of
the main reasons why CES is designed around Themes. This
gives a context with which the students can associate language
and thus makes it more memorable. You can see the effect of
context, meaning and association with a few simple experiments
with one of your classes.
-
Give
your students a list of 20 random words to learn and, at the
same time, a short passage about something interesting. Test
their ability to recall it in WRITING.
Ask them to write down anything they remember from the
list and anything from the passage (for the purposes
of this experiment, ignore SPELLING
mistakes). One week and two weeks later, test the students on
both things again. Which do they remember most? How much is
lost from the list and from the passage?
-
Try
a similar experiment but, this time, actively involve the students
with the language in some way in order to build up associations
with the language. For example, you could identify each word
on the list with a part of the room (ask the students to imagine
that the word 'street' is in the corner of the room, 'traffic'
is near the window, 'airport' is near the door and so on). A
week later, point to each part of the room and see if they can
recall the word.
-
You
can try a similar experiment with remembering 'chunks' of text.
Ask the students to act it out, perhaps in pairs as a dialogue.
Or perhaps they could sing it or associate physical movement
with each sentence.

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