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Clines

This resource explains how Clines 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

Clines are gradients used for teaching gradations of meaning. Words are spaced along the gradient, for example, words to describe temperature, such as tepid, hot, boiling, cool, cold, warm, chilly, and freezing.

This resource explains how Clines can be used to support teaching mathematical vocabulary to English Language Learners.

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    Clines

    Clines are gradients used for teaching gradations of meaning. Words are spaced along the gradient, for example, words to describe temperature, such as tepid, hot, boiling, cool, cold, warm, chilly, and freezing. After modelling the task, give these words to groups of students to place on the cline. The discussion that comes with this task is as important as the task itself.

    Purpose

    A cline task can be used to explicitly teach measurement vocabulary. This could happen at the beginning of a unit of work on measurement so that students know and understand the vocabulary and can fully participate in the learning.

    Procedure

    Give measurement words to individual students or pairs after explicit teaching. On the cline template, they arrange the words in order from shortest/smallest to longest/biggest. You can also ask them to match the vocabulary with concrete materials, for example, match the pencils with the appropriate words.

    Suggested vocabulary to use

    Short, shorter, shortest; long, longer, longest (length)
    Or: millimetre, centimetre, metre, kilometre
    Or: gram, kilogram, tonne (weight)
    Or: millisecond, second, minute, hour, day, week, month, year, decade, century (time)

    Cline template

    A diagonal line.

    What to look for

    • Which vocabulary items are students unfamiliar with?
    • Which vocabulary items confuse students?
    • Are students responding to prefixes and suffixes, for example, milli = thousand?
    • Can students relate the vocabulary to concrete examples? For example, can they find the shortest pencil and match it with the right word?
    • Which vocabulary items need further teaching?

    Back to resource 4: Teaching mathematical language to English students

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