REVIEW: The first two paragraphs include the main points of the plot., Last paragraph: overall assessment and/or a recommendation, Choose an appropriate title. (keep it short), Useful Language: This well-written/thought-provoking/fascinating, Evaluate different features , Give reasons why sb should see/read it, REPORT: Make a suggestion or recommendation, Use headings for each of the sections, Introduction: State the purpose of your piece, Factual information is expected, Formal/Semi-formal language, ARTICLE: Grab reader’s attention, Catchy opening to hook the readers, No headings or titles are needed, Personal tone: Address the reader! , Give your own opinion, Use contractions, It’s not too formal, ESSAY: Do not express your opinion in the introduction, The conclusion restates the main idea, Using ‘I’ or ‘YOU’ might be inappropriate, Use formal language, Give examples wherever possible, Do not use contractions, FORMAL LETTERS: Introduction: Dear Sir or Madam, , Say what you’re responding to (in the introduction), Don’t include any postal addresses, No direct questions, Closing paragraph: Yours faithfully/ Yours sincerely, INFORMAL LETTERS: Start with DEAR + person’s first name, Start with a greeting, Acknowledge the letter to which you’re replying, It’s OK to use phrasal verbs., Lots of love, All the best, Take care (appropriate closing statements),
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Click HERE to be brought to your WRITING work.
Click HERE to be brought to your WRITING work.
Word Wall & Writing Paper
Word Wall & Writing Paper
Please use these tools to help you when you are writing at home.
Please use these tools to help you when you are writing at home.
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Fundations Writing Paper
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Our Class Word Wall
Writing_Paper.pdf
word wall words as of jan feb.xls
Looking for word wall ideas? Word walls are a popular teaching strategy to improve literacy skills across the curriculum. Basically, word walls are a collection of important words displayed in large, visible letters on any display surface in the classroom. Your word wall should be an interactive tool for students and contain an array of words that can be used during writing and reading.
A traditional word wall is organized alphabetically using all 26 letters of the alphabet. Sight words (also known as high-frequency words or no-excuse words) are placed under each letter based on the first letter of each word. An alternative option is a sound wall, which is based on the science of reading. This strategy organizes words by their speech sounds (phonemes) rather than alphabetically.
But word walls need not be limited to just sight words. You can use them for spelling words, content area words, unit vocabulary words, parts of speech, and much more. The possibilities are endless!
Here we’ve gathered 24 of our favorite word wall ideas to help you get started. And for more ideas from classroom teachers, check out Teaching Made Practical and Mrs. Beattie’s Classroom.
1. Traditional Word Wall
This kindergarten word wall follows the traditional model. Each letter of the alphabet is prominently displayed with vocabulary words written on colored cards underneath them.
Source: Cozy Classroom Crew
2. Star Words
Early learners need to master basic, frequently used words in order to progress as readers. This word wall includes “star words” for students to refer to at any time.
Source: Rainbows Within Reach
3. Polka Dot Word Wall
Colored cards on this word wall help each individual word stand out. In addition, each card is cut to correspond to the letters’ physical shapes, which help students with word recognition.
Source: Girlfriend’s Guide to Teaching
4. Wow Words
Sheets of colored card stock provide a background grid for this “Wow Word” word wall. As the students come across interesting and important words, the teacher can add them to the wall.
Source: Live Laugh Learn in Second Grade
5. Popcorn Words
Sometimes sight words are called popcorn words because they keep “popping” up when students read and write.
Source: Rainbows Within Reach
6. Lollipop Word Wall
All you need to create this fun word wall is colorful paper plates and polka-dot ribbons. As your students learn new words, they can be added to the display.
Source: Simply the Middle
7. Interactive Word Wall
Finding herself short on wall space, this teacher took advantage of the tall cabinets in her room to display her word wall. Kids can reference words from their seat or engage in independent word work by “reading” the wall with a partner.
Source: Dragonflies in First
8. Picture Card Word Wall
This word wall, printed in large letters to be easily seen from all areas of the classroom, is a collection of common vocabulary words. Each word has a corresponding image to aid students’ understanding. Many teachers offer pre-printed picture word cards on Teachers Pay Teachers.
Source: Mrs. D’s Room
9. Foam Blocks Word Wall
This word wall, made up of large foam letter blocks with words clearly printed on handwriting strips, puts important first words on display for young readers.
Source: Rainbows Within Reach
10. Flower Pots Word Wall
What a colorful word wall idea! Flower vases made from dry-erase paper allow the teacher to easily add or delete words as needed.
Source: Coaching Chronicles
11. Personal Word Wall
Last year this teacher switched from a word wall to word wall folders. Each student kept their folder in their writing bin for quick access. Along with standard sight words, they could also personalize their lists as they came across new words.
Source: Teach Love and Iced Coffee
12. Color-Coded Word Wall
This word wall is a multipurpose learning tool for students. Each word is written in the color corresponding to the subject. Also, titles at the top of the board help students differentiate the words.
Source: Learning Focused
13. Multi-Subject Word Wall
This is another example of a mixed-purpose word wall. This one provides a legend to help students keep track.
Source: Reading Strategies
14. Picture Word Wall
This teacher involves her students in making the classroom word wall. Each important word card is written and illustrated by one of the kids. The images help students make stronger connections to the printed words.
Source: Tales of an Elementary Teacher
15. Math Word Wall
Math teachers need word wall ideas too! Understanding math relies heavily on vocabulary instruction. Here, this teacher groups together different concepts into a visual display for students to use.
Source: Diane Davenport
16. Geometry Word Wall
This word wall idea condenses the important words in a geometry unit into one display for students to review. Once the students move on to a new topic, the teacher can create a new word wall with the appropriate vocabulary words.
Source: Learning Focused
17. Words by Subject
Engaged learners examine the cards on this word wall to learn words that fall into different categories.
Source: Teachstarter
18. Reading Group Word Wall
Vocabulary is a critical part of reading instruction. This word wall focuses on important words from the story The Three Billy Goats Gruff.
Source: Keeping Up With Miss Parks
19. Word Families Word Walls
One of the ways early readers expand their mastery is by learning to recognize words that have the same spelling pattern. This word wall groups words in the same word families together for easy reference.
Source: Coaching Chronicles
20. Multiple Word Walls
This image shows many different uses for word walls in the classroom. From introducing new language to breaking down words into categories, students have multiple points of support.
Source: Christie – Engage 2 Learn
21. Nutrition Word Wall
Word walls are a fantastic way to help children develop their phonic/spelling abilities and recognize letter patterns. In addition, they are a great way to categorize words into different groups.
Source: KidLit Bookworm
22. Spanish Vocabulary Word Wall
Looking for word wall ideas for your world language classroom? This Spanish teacher celebrates February with Valentine’s Day vocabulary words in Spanish to give students instant visual support to build vocabulary quickly.
Source: Señora Lee
23. Student-Made Word Wall
This teacher assigned each student a vocabulary word in their geography unit. Their task was to create a card with the word, an explanation of the word, and a drawing. A clever way to help students take ownership of their learning!
Source: Eureka Sheets
24. Favorite Words Word Wall
This creative word wall idea started with a question: What is your favorite word and why? Each student wrote and illustrated their own word to add to the wall. What a great community-building activity!
Source: New End Primary School
Come share your word wall ideas in our WeAreTeachers Helpline Facebook group.
Plus, check out 20 Meaningful Vocabulary Activities for Every Grade.
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.