Effects of Academic Vocabulary Instruction for Linguistically Diverse Adolescents: Evidence From a Randomized Field Trial

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Author
Author
Lesaux, Nonie K.; Kieffer, Michael J.; Kelley Joan G.; Harris, Julie Russ
Journal
American Educational Research Journal
Details
Resource Type
Journal
Acquisition Number
BE025879
Published Date
12-29-2015 2:54 PM
Published Year
2014
Number of Pages
36
Language(s)
Subscription Only
No
Abstract
The authors conducted a randomized field trial to test an academic vocabulary intervention designed to bolster the language and literacy skills of linguistically diverse sixth-grade students (N = 2,082; n = 1,469 from a home where English is not the primary language), many demonstrating low achievement, enrolled in 14 urban middle schools. The 20-week classroom-based intervention improved students' vocabulary knowledge, morphological awareness skills, and comprehension of expository texts that included academic words taught, as well as their performance on a standardized measure of written language skills. The effects were generally larger for students whose primary home language is not English and for those students who began the intervention with underdeveloped vocabulary knowledge.
Topics
Vocabulary
Teaching Methods and Strategies
Randomized Control Trials
English Learners
English Learners
Academic Language