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Before and after vocabulary grid

This page explains how a before and after vocabulary grid can be used to support teaching mathematical language to English Language Learners.

A teacher and a group of children are working on a project in a classroom.

Tags

  • AudienceKaiako
  • Curriculum LevelAll
  • Learning AreaMathematics and Statistics
  • Resource LanguageEnglish
  • SeriesAccelerating learning

About this resource

This resource explains how before and after vocabulary grids can help students notice and focus on key words. Vocabulary grids give students opportunities to work out word meanings and helps them develop independence in doing so.

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    Before and after vocabulary grid

    Purpose

    This task helps students to notice and focus on key words. It gives them opportunities to work out word meanings and helps them to develop independence in doing so.

    Procedure

    Give each student a list of key words for the topic with two blank columns alongside. In the first column, the students write the meaning of each word or what they guess the meaning is. As they come across the word in context later in the lesson, they can revise their definition. The answers can then be discussed and clarified with the whole class, or the words can be used in a sentence, as in the example table below.

    Give students the vocabulary grid at the beginning of the unit of work. As they encounter the vocabulary, they begin to consolidate their understanding of it. They are able to refer to this vocabulary list during the course of the unit.

    Example of a before and after vocabulary grid with a focus on geometry

     

    Geometry
    word
    My definition
    before
    My definition 
    after
    The word in a
    sentence 
    vertices       
    sides       
    right angle      
    parallel       
    cuboids       
    reflection       
    rotation       
    translation      

    What to look for

    • Which students are able to use the mathematical contexts to establish definitions?
    • Which vocabulary items are difficult for the students to define?
    • Are there some vocabulary items that students can show you in concrete examples but not describe in oral or written forms?
    • Which vocabulary is not understood by students and needs to be taught more explicitly?

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