This week, I asked my dear friend and colleague, Lori Conrad, to share some of her thinking with us about her work with learners. In this post, she focuses on "word work." My students call her "The Word Lady." She is, indeed, a word lady. Lori and I have known each other since college days and she is one of my most trusted friends. And, I have to say, one of the smartest people I know. I love her stance on becoming "word wonderers"!
Enjoy Lori's words...
• • • • •
Becoming Word Wonderers
by Lori L. Conrad
“I underlined Triforium and Trifoolery.”
“I underlined those, too, and Schlockenspiel.
And what about festooned? Did you guys mark that one?”
“I didn’t because I’m guessing it has something to do with a festival.
At least we know it is a verb, right?”
“Yeah, and did you guys read the caption?
What the heck does polyphonoptic mean?”
This was just a bit of the early conversation four self-professed
‘word wonderers’ shared as they poured over a
newspaper clipping entitled “After 40 Years, L.A.’s Triforium
Makes a Comeback” (A.P., 2/12/2017). As their inquiry
progressed, the foursome decided that:
- triforium must mean some sort of three-pointed (tri)
place where music was performed (form like in
perform and ium like auditorium or gymnasium)
- polyphonoptic must mean many (poly) sights (optic)
and sounds (phono)
- and, they weren’t too sure about schlockenspiel
other than it must have something to do with
making music (like a glockenspiel) and it wasn’t a
nice thing to be called!
Now, this sort of talk about words doesn’t just happen.
These four boys learned how to think their way through dicey vocabulary by engaging in regular,
inquiry-based word study. In his book, Word Savvy, Max Brand says that word study:
“has become an umbrella term used to describe teaching practices
related to
word knowledge. Teaching this knowledge supports students
as they develop
fluency and understanding in their reading, as well as
their ability to craft
thoughtful writing. An effective word study system
helps students develop an
understanding of orthography, vocabulary,
word recognition, and decoding
strategies.”
For me, word study has become an instructional framework that supports learners as they become
both word curious and word conscious.
And in this classroom filled with 26 word wonderers, word study means that 4 days a week, the entire
class spends a 40-minute workshop exploring word meanings, word parts, spelling patterns,
letter/sound relationships, and strategies to figure out unknown words. Together, their teacher and I
launch the 40 minutes by offering a precise bit of information or insight about a specific language feature or word set. We then send the wonderers off to explore and develop hypotheses. The
workshop ends when we all circle-up to reflect on what we’ve discovered, including conclusions about
how our daily reading and writing should reflect these new insights and discoveries.
The work time, the largest and undoubtedly most important part of each word study workshop, has
included tasks like:
- word and sentence searches – using wonderers’ own reading stacks and draft writing as
resources for extending and exemplifying the particular study
- word sorts – puzzling through lists of words looking for some unifying attribute and then
grouping/categorizing those words to create generalizations
- editing/proofreading ongoing draft writing
- “explain a spelling” (adapted from Sandra Wilde) – encouraging wonderers to talk about their
thinking regarding specific spelling decisions they made while drafting, sorting words, etc.
- have-a-go – selecting misspelled words or ‘clunky’ sentences and then trying two or three
different options... settling on a final edition that makes better sense
- and developing visual representations – like web, wheels and grids – for spelling patterns,
sentence patterns and grammar generalizations
So far this year, the content of these workshops have included topics like the various meanings of the
suffix ‘er’ (both as a comparative and as a way to change a verb into a noun) and when to use ‘er’ or
‘or’ (have you ever noticed that there isn’t a hard-and-fast rule for this?!), how readers use parts of
multi-syllabic words to infer meaning, how phrases (like dependent and independent) might be
punctuated, and ways writers expand their lexicon by building on the phrase: ‘If I can read/spell
_______, then I can also read/spell _______. The year-long ‘scope of word work’ is certainly bounded
by grade-level standards, but it is more importantly informed by what the students themselves need... and what sparks their word wonderment.
Our word study workshop has helped grow learners, like the four boys who figured out that calling
something a schlockenspiel isn’t nice, into readers/writers/thinkers who are fascinated by language,
are intrigued by the many ways letters and sounds link up to make meaning, and are unfazed by the
sometimes crazy ways English spelling and grammar show up on the pages of their favorite books and
in their very own stories, articles and poems.