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You’ve created, printed, and hung your beautiful new word wall. Now what? You’ve spent a ton of time researching and compiling words for your word wall, and you don’t want it to become a passive reference point, fading into the background of daily instruction. Sound familiar? The activities listed below will help you to transform your word wall into an interactive tool for students to utilize on a regular basis.
KWL Chart
Most of the words that make up your classroom word wall will be new to your students, but there is a chance that a few will be familiar. Completing an individual KWL chart when the word wall is first introduced will give you an idea of how much students know about each word. It will also allow students to track their vocabulary knowledge as the unit or chapter progresses. First, instruct students to split their paper into three columns: Know, Want to Know, and Learned. Next, have students sort the word wall words into the “Know” and “Want to Know” columns. As you progress through the unit or chapter of study, students should be able to move words from the “Want to Know” column to the “Learned” column.
Story Time
Students write a story using all (or a set number) of words from the word wall. This activity works well because students need to have a clear understanding of each word’s meaning before effectively including it in their narrative. Also, dramatizing the words will assist students in remembering the individual word meanings.
Word Categories
Students sort the words from the word wall into categories. In order to allow students to form their own sorting patterns, categories are not predetermined. Similar to the use of a graphic organizer, sorting the words into categories will allow students to clarify patterns and relationships between words.
I Have, Who Has
Playing I Have, Who Has with students requires some prep work on your part, but the pay-off is worth it. Before playing the game, write each word and definition (separately) on a card to pass out to students. In other words, you will give each student a word card and a definition card. The format for creating the word and definition cards is up to you. To start game play, pass out a word card and definition card to each student. Once all of the cards have been passed out, the game begins. Choose a student to read the first definition in the following format, “Who has (insert definition)?” The student who has the word for that definition responds with, “I have (insert word). Who has (insert definition).” Game play continues until all words and definitions have been read.
Word Art
Students create a visual representation of each word. Connecting each term with a picture reinforces word recognition and recall. Plus, this activity appeals to multiple learning styles, and it’s easy to differentiate.
Word Wall BINGO
In order to play Word Wall BINGO, each student will need a game board that includes words from the word wall. When you read a definition, students mark off the corresponding word. In order to ensure that you have one winner, make sure all of your word wall BINGO cards are different. Not all cards need to include all of the word wall words. In fact, it’s more challenging for students if the cards don’t include all of the words from the word wall.
ABC Order
Placing the words in alphabetical order will give students practice with the spelling of each word. Ideally, a majority of the words on the word wall will be fairly new to students. Learning to spell new words is an integral part of the vocabulary acquisition process.
Parts of Speech Sort
Reinforce grammar skills with a parts of speech sorting activity. Students sort each word from the wall according to its part of speech. If students are still learning the different parts of speech, you can provide them with a dictionary to check their work. This is a great activity for reviewing the use and function of the eight parts of speech.
Spelling Bee
Hosting a classroom spelling bee is another activity that will reinforce the correct spelling of each word on the word wall. Splitting the class into teams and making it a friendly competition will increase engagement and participation. If students are not comfortable speaking in front of the class, or if you don’t want to put students on the spot, you can transform the spelling bee into an oral spelling test.
Mind Reader
The essence of this game is for students to guess the word based on a series of verbal clues. In order to teach students how to play, start off by giving them clues and let them be the mind readers. After students have a clear understanding of the game, they can play on their own in pairs or teams. Sticking to a set number of clues for each word adds urgency and avoids boredom.
Sentences
Keep it simple, and require students to use each word in a sentence. Placing the words in context creates relevance and cements meaning, making it an ideal practice activity for learning new words.
Matchmaking
The open-ended and creative nature of the matchmaking activity makes it a favorite for students. Essentially, there is never a wrong answer. Working in pairs, students make authentic connections between two words from the word wall. Building associations between words reinforces meaning and gives students a chance to work with each word in a low-stakes environment. You can assign word combinations or let students choose on their own.
Flashcards
Students create a set of flashcards for all the words on the word wall. The physical act of writing out each word and its definition will reinforce understanding and recognition. Plus, the flashcards can be used as a future study aid.
Fill-In-The-Blank
Similar to sentence writing, the fill-in-the-blank activity requires students to place each word in context. Write a sentence that includes each word from the wall, but insert a blank space where the word should be. It is the job of the students to figure out which word goes with each sentence. This activity is extremely versatile. You can create a worksheet of fill-in-the-blank sentences, or write the sentences on the board. Identifying the words in context, rather than in isolation, is important because it provides students with a strong frame of reference for understanding and integration.
Synonyms and Antonyms
Finding synonyms and antonyms is a common activity for learning new words. Extend the activity with a lesson on word choice, connotation, or shades of meaning.
20 Questions
Pick one word from the word wall, but don’t reveal which one. In order to guess the word, students are permitted to ask twenty yes or no questions. Based on answers to the yes or no questions, students try to determine the correct word. After learning how to play, you can break the class into pairs to play on their own.
Word Search
Most students enjoy completing a word search. Throw in a highlighter, and it’s even more fun. You can create your own word search puzzle, or use an online word search generator. I prefer to use the word search generator from A to Z Teacher Tools because it gives the option for including only forward facing words.
Charades
Make learning fun with a game of vocabulary charades. First, place students into teams. Next, call on a volunteer to act out the word from the list of word wall words. Teams can only shout out three guesses. The team that guesses correctly, earns a point. Game play continues in this fashion until all words have been played, or time runs out.
Hangman
Hangman can be played as a class or in pairs. In order to make the game more challenging, cover up the word wall during game play. If your students are not familiar with how to play hangman, click here to show them a short explainer video.
Flyswatter Splat
Another students favorite, flyswatter splat reinforces word meaning with engaging game play. First, list (or project) all words from the word wall on the board. Next, split students into two teams, and select a student from each team to be the first “splatter”. “Splatters” stand next to the list of words on the board. The game begins when you read a definition of one of the word wall words. The first student to “splat” the correct word with the fly swatter earns a point for their team. Game play continues until all definitions have been read.
Acrostic Poems
In order to complete this poetry activity with your students, assign a word from the word wall to each student. Have students write the word vertically on a piece of paper. Each letter of the word will start a line to their poem. The poem must be reflective of the word’s meaning. Lines can be made up of single words or phrases, and rhyming is not necessary.
Matching
Students match each word with its correct definition. Depending on existing knowledge of the words, students may need to use a dictionary to check their work.
Around the World
Around the World is another game that gets students up and out of their seats. A detailed explanation of the game can be found here. You can read the definition and require students to guess the word or vice versa.
120 Root Words, Prefixes, and Suffixes Word Wall with Flashcards
Crossword Puzzle
Completing a traditional crossword puzzle will give students an opportunity to learn the definitions of each word. If you want to take more of a hands-on learning approach, you can let students manipulate the word wall words into their own crossword puzzle using letter tiles or letter cards. While this version doesn’t necessarily reinforce the definition of each word, connecting and arranging the words will reinforce spelling.
Student Additions
When it is clear that students have a solid grasp of all the word wall words, give them the opportunity to add more words. Adding relevant words moves students from the basic levels of cognition to the more advanced levels of critical thinking.
Brooke Khan, M.A.Ed2020-11-24T20:33:42+00:00
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What is a Word Wall?
Word Walls are organized collections of words placed on a wall or other surface in the classroom. They are excellent tools for building word consciousness in students through increased vocabulary interaction and social learning opportunities; especially as students make connections among important concepts and big ideas. Interactive Word Walls, vocabulary notebooks, and periodic reviews are all important ways to revisit and reinforce vocabulary over time.
What does a Word Wall look like?
There are several different types of Word Walls which serve different purposes and focus on different skills. For example, it is common for primary classrooms to display high-frequency Word Walls, but it is unlikely to find such a Word Wall in a secondary classroom.
Word Walls in classrooms take on many forms. They can be color-coded by content area on index cards that are affixed to the wall. They can be on chart paper, a display board, or a concept map. No matter the way you choose to display Word Walls, the words on the Word Wall must be large enough that they can easily be seen by all students in the room from wherever they are seated.
Regardless of the structure, all grade levels should have content area Word Walls on display.
How are Word Walls organized?
How many Word Walls are in a room may depend on how the content areas are organized, whether high-frequency words or retired Word Walls are utilized, or how many courses are taught by a single teacher. For example:
- Elementary classrooms may have one Word Wall for various content areas, color-coded for each subject. Additionally, there may be a high-frequency Word Wall.
- In secondary classrooms, there may be separate Word Walls for each course, as well as specialized Word Walls, such as testing words.
How to Use a Word Wall in the Classroom?
Word Walls can be effective learning tools, or they can be wallpaper. Even the most organized Word Walls won’t help students learn words unless they are used. The words displayed on the Word Wall should be words that you currently want your students to use and should come down and get replaced by new words when a new lesson or unit is introduced. The same is true for high-frequency Word Walls.
Use the words on the Word Wall to create Advance Organizers (i.e. Student Learning Maps and Concept Maps) to meaningfully distinguish and highlight important vocabulary concepts (keywords), characteristics (descriptions or examples), and categories (“chunks” of learning connected to Learning Goals).
How do I retire words from the wall?
Once students are using the words appropriately, the words can come down. When words come down from the high frequency or content Word Walls, they can go to a retired Word Wall elsewhere in the room, or in an interactive vocabulary notebook. Students should use the interactive vocabulary notebooks daily for new word learning and can use them for structured review, writing, word games, and retired words. They are especially useful when learning word parts.
How do I use Word Walls during remote learning?
Virtual Word Walls apply the same characteristics as physical ones. They are most impactful when students know where to find the tool and are expected to use it for a purpose (i.e. writing, review, or as a scaffold for an assignment). Word wall ideas for remote learning are:
- Create a dedicated location in your classroom (or classroom website) to display vocabulary from the current lesson and unit.
- The size and color of fonts and virtual backgrounds are chosen to enhance visibility, not create “visual noise” that detracts from students’ ability to locate and see displayed words.
- Avoid busy patterns and small and light-colored fonts (i.e. yellow) to maximize displayed vocabulary.
- Use a digital “Word Wall” explicitly during a lesson as a scaffold for the assignment and to promote wordplay during Learning Activities.
- Provide a consistent and easily accessible “virtual” location to display current vocabulary that is used by both the teacher and students in lesson instruction.
More Word Wall Ideas for Virtual Classrooms
- Create a Concept as an editable (or fillable) PDF.
- Try Google Jamboards, Milanote, Miro, or MindMup to virtually create and manipulate concept maps and other word clusters.
- Dedicate a space on the main home page of your Google Classroom (or another LMS platform). Create a separate page for words as they are archived.
- Flip your Word Wall activity to create a super-effective previewing strategy! Create an Advance Organizer for a unit (i.e. Student Learning Map) or a lesson (i.e. Concept Map) and use it to activate students’ thinking prior to the start of a lesson.
- Use virtual games for wordplay to provide students with multiple opportunities to interact with the words, and as periodic review to improve students’ storage and retrieval of word meanings.
Interactive Word Wall Activities and Games
Primary: LINGO
- Ask students to vote for words prior to the game. Digital Adaptation: Try dotstorming for easy card voting.
- Provide students with a blank LINGO grid (may be a downloadable form or sent home as a part of a packet).
- Students will practice writing each word anywhere they choose on the grid.
- Shuffle index cards with the words and call the words one at a time.
- Have students chant the spelling of each word and then cover it with an object. (Try Lima Beans as students may not be too tempted to eat them!).
- The first student to have a complete row covered wins LINGO.
- Students can clear their sheets and play again.
Intermediate: Scrabble Scramble
- Digital Adaptation: Use Google Jamboards to create whiteboard spaces for your students.
- Each whiteboard should have digital “Post-It” notes for each letter of the alphabet. Some letters may need to be duplicated.
- On the first whiteboard, show students a scrambled up word from the concept map or one of your vocabulary clusters.
- Give the definition of the word or create a story passage about the word.
- Students take turns unscrambling the words, that is, moving the letters until they correctly form the word.
- Check students’ thinking by viewing everyone’s Google Jamboard by viewing the expanded frame at the top.
- Unscramble your word on the first whiteboard to show students the correct answer.
Secondary: Possible Sentences
- Give students a word bank of words to choose from, and ask them to use some of the words to create possible sentences, predicting what will be learned that day.
- The teacher displays and discusses the meanings of six new words critical to the lesson.
- persecution / famine / scarcity / prosperity / migration / exodus
- The teacher adds four related words that are familiar to most students to the above list.
- homelands / agriculture / survival / poverty
- Students work in collaborative pairs to look for words that are connected and create sentences before reading the text.
- Digital Adaptation: Try it with Padlet. The board can be organized as columns to cluster words and provide a place for the students to post their Possible Sentences.
Want more ideas on how to redesign your current vocabulary activities and strategies for your physical and virtual Word Walls? Join us for our upcoming Effective Vocabulary Instruction Training of Trainers Virtual Institute. Contact us today for a quote.
Do you dream of a learning resource that makes your classroom look more academic, inviting, and kid friendly, even as it helps students become more independent? A word wall could be just what you’re looking for!
[📷: Top image by missmskindergarten on Instagram.]
A word wall is just that—a wall dedicated to displaying high frequency words (these could be sight words or words that are used a lot in your class) that are important for your students to know and use. In early elementary classrooms, these are words that children are learning to read and write. In upper grade classrooms, these can be words related to concepts and topics that students are learning about. You could have a word wall about math that incorporates math definitions and symbols. Or, a science wall that, over the course of a unit, gets filled with biomes and animals that live in each. You’ll know you have a successful word wall when students use it daily to find just the right word when they’re reading or writing.
Why use a word wall?
Word walls are a staple of early elementary classrooms. They’re important for young readers because they:
- Provide a place to post high frequency words that have already been taught. Students can use the words as a reference during reading and writing, making them more independent while teaching them how to use a reference tool;
- Help students see patterns and differences in words. Having the words the, they, their, and there together on the wall helps students recognize the similarities and differences between each word; and
- Make words concrete for young learners as they find words on the word wall using their finger or a pointer.
Word walls can help upper elementary, middle, and high school students as well by:
- Reinforcing the spelling of important terms across a unit or of frequently misspelled words;
- Housing words that you want students to use more in their writing or discussion; and
- Expanding student vocabulary by helping students see how words connect, as in a word wall that displays lists of synonyms.
How do I make a good word wall?
Having a word wall is about more than printing Dolch words or a vocabulary list and posting it on your wall. Effective word walls are part of daily instruction and are a tool that students will use throughout the day. To make a word wall:
- Place the word wall in an area of the classroom that is visible and accessible and use a dark background to make the words stand out.
- Organize high frequency words in alphabetical order to support students’ knowledge of the alphabetic principle.
- Organize other words walls that display vocabulary words, synonyms, or other concepts in a way that helps students see how the words connect or in a way that makes the most sense for student use. For example, a list of science terms may be listed in alphabetical order, while words used during reading may be organized by prefix.
- 3×5 note cards are a good size to post (you’ll fit a lot on one wall, and they are big enough to be read from a distance). Use different colors to add another reference point for students. If they ask about a word, you can direct them to the “pink card under the L.” Writing words on different color cards also helps children distinguish similar words.
- This seems obvious, but write in large dark letters, again, so the words are easy to see from anywhere in the classroom.
- Insider tip: Keep the materials (3×5 note cards, black marker, tape) that you’ll use to create a word handy, so you can make and add words to the word wall during a lesson. Students may even suggest words that they want added to the wall as you teach.
Okay, my word wall is up. Now, how do I use it?
- First, don’t overdo it. Teach three to five new words each week.
- Teach children how to use the word wall. Model how to use the word wall to find and spell words during writing or how to “read around the room” using a pointer or their finger to read the words on the wall.
- Use the word wall each day. Incorporate words that are already on the wall into daily activities, like word sorts, word ladders, and word practice.
- In addition to high frequency words, add words that are content specific. The more relevant the words are to students’ experience, the more they’ll be used and the faster students will learn to read and write them. Even pulling words from the school song and incorporating those into the word wall is a great way to generate words for the wall.
- Spend a few minutes each day playing a word wall game, like bingo or charades.
- Each time a student asks about a word that is on the word wall (“How do you spell … ?”) create and use a hand signal (maybe use the American Sign Language signs for “word” and “wall”) that refers them to the word wall. After all, the whole point is that they’ll use it on their own.
I already have a word wall; how do I take it to the next level?
Once you’ve mastered the basic word wall techniques, you can take it further:
- Use Velcro or sticky tack to make the words removable so students can take the word they need to their desk for reference. Or, write the words on the back of envelopes. Put that note cards, with the word written on each, inside the envelope. Then, post the envelope and let students select a note card for reference when they need it.
- Add a new word to the wall for a period of time and have students hunt for this visiting word. Then, see if they can use the visiting word in their writing and discussion.
- Challenge students to write a story (or article) using as many words from the word wall as they can.
Get even more word wall ideas:
- How to set up your literacy space so that it focuses on literacy skills and content (word walls are one of them).
- Inspiration for word walls that are works of art.
Come and share your word wall ideas in our WeAreTeachers HELPLINE group on Facebook.
Plus, check out vocabulary ideas that make words stick.