In Bringing Words to Life, the authors, Beck & McKeown, give an example of instruction for younger grades with the word reluctant from the book A Pocket for Corduroy. In the story Lisa is reluctant to the laundromat without Corduroy. Here is what Beck & McKeown recommend:
- Read the context of the word reluctant.
- Give a child-friendly definition of reluctant - not sure you want to do something.
- Repeat the word, practicing its pronunciation.
- Give examples in context talking about a time you were reluctant to do something.
- Ask students what they would be reluctant to do and replies are phrased using the word: I would be reluctant to _____.
Moving beyond the context of the word into real life examples, helps students construct "a meaningful and memorable representation of the word."
Go a step further and use the InferCabulary method by adding pictures to help students understand what reluctant looks like. In the picture on the right, the girl is reluctant to eat her vegetables - something all kids can relate to.
Taking vocabulary instruction to the next level means taking the word from the everyday mundane classroom exercises and putting into a context that applies to everyday life with examples they will remember - the sillier and funnier, the better!
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