Vocabulary Instruction Tips for Students With and Without Disabilities - Brookes Blog

Vocabulary Instruction Tips for Students With and Without Disabilities

February 9, 2021

Because vocabulary is such a critical aspect of language and reading comprehension, effective vocabulary instruction is important for students of all ages and ability levels. Good vocabulary instruction goes beyond teaching definitions of words—it involves helping students develop a deep and complete understanding of words and what they mean.

All students can acquire new vocabulary when they’re provided with skillful instruction and rich opportunities to explore words. In today’s post, excerpted and adapted from Comprehensive Literacy for All, by Karen Erickson & David Koppenhaver, you’ll learn about five approaches to supporting vocabulary learning for your students. (Although this book is about literacy for students with significant disabilities, most of the ideas in this post can apply to students with and without disabilities.)

Build Curiosity About Words

Help students recognize when they encounter unknown words and increase their interest in learning about the meaning of those new words and how they relate to known words. To promote students’ curiosity about words, try these ideas:

Engage in Interactive Read-Alouds

Read-alouds are important for all students, but especially crucial for learners with more significant disabilities—many of whom struggle with vocabulary because they’ve had limited access to texts for reading and listening. Reading books and other materials out loud to students can give them access to a wide range of diverse vocabulary words they might otherwise never encounter, which can help close the word gap for students with significant disabilities.

Here are some tips to consider for your classroom read-alouds:

Focus on Connections

Your students will build stronger vocabulary skills when they can connect the new words they learn to other words they know. Here are a couple strategies you can use to build connections between words:

Select Vocabulary to Teach

When you select vocabulary to teach, focus on high-utility words that are likely to appear across a variety of academic domains and contexts. Determining which words to teach will depend on your students’ existing vocabulary skills. If you teach in an inclusive classroom with students who have significant disabilities, don’t assume they have the same vocabulary base as their peers without disabilities—some will have more robust vocabulary skills, while other learners may have relatively limited vocabularies. Beck and colleagues proposed three tiers of vocabulary to consider:

The words you choose to teach students with significant disabilities should come largely from Tier 2, unless you know that the students are still acquiring Tier 1 words.

Tailor Vocabulary Instruction for Students Who Use AAC

Even with the most high-tech augmentative and alternative communication options, it’s difficult to provide students who use AAC with meaningful access to the approximately 8,000 words in Tier 1, let alone the additional 7,000 in Tier 2. But not teaching those words puts these students at a great disadvantage. To strengthen vocabulary instruction for students who use AAC: