Episode Forty-six

5 Ways to Present New Vocabulary

Show Notes

Looking for some ways to make your vocabulary lessons more effective and fun? In this episode, I'll walk you through engaging, student-centered ideas for presenting new vocabulary words in your lessons.


In this Episode

#1: Use a picture or realia

  • this works best for concrete, literal items

  • realia = the actual, physical object (i.e. holding up a literal apple to teach the word "apple” instead of showing a picture of an apple)

  • elicit the words from the students by asking, “What is this?” when you hold up the picture or item

  • make this into a student-centered activity by having students label a set of vocabulary items in the same picture

#2: Create a matching task

  • students can match words to definitions

  • students can match words to their synonyms

  • students can match words to their antonyms

  • students can match words to individual pictures

  • students can match words or phrases to examples

  • allow students to do the matching activity on their own first, then check answers in pairs

#3: Let students label items on a cline

  • a cline is similar to a timeline, but shows gradation/ degrees instead of time

  • example: students could label temperatures (freezing, cold, cool, neutral, warm, hot, boiling) from coldest to hottest on a cline

  • works best with gradable adjectives and adverbs

  • helpful because meaning can be conveyed clearly without using much other language

#4: Ask students to fill in the blanks in a dialogue or text

  • this gives students a larger context as opposed to just definitions

  • providing a word bank will make this more manageable

#5: Present the vocabulary in a text

  • have the words highlighted or underlined in the text

  • let students read the text for gist / general understanding first before asking them to focus on the individual vocabulary words

  • teach the students some strategies for finding the meaning of the words

  • allow the students to do this in pairs/ small groups

  • this helps the students become more autonomous learners


Did you try any of these strategies? Comment below and let me know how it went!