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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Green, Margaret Baker
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1969
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED034668
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author Green, Margaret Baker
author_facet Green, Margaret Baker
Green, Margaret Baker
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Improving the Meaning Vocabulary of Inner-City Children. Green, Margaret Baker Black Dialects Disadvantaged Disadvantaged Youth Language Handicaps Language Skills Parent Role School Role Verbal Development Vocabulary Development Word Recognition Strengthening and changing the curriculum to meet the needs of the inner-city child must be done by recognizing both the cultural aspects of the child's environment and the actual problems that he faces rather than by imposing traditional middle-class values, activities, and language. Steps suggested to both the teacher and the parent for improving the meaning vocabulary of inner-city children are (1) talk to the child, (2) listen to the child, (3) read to the child, (4) teach sequentially specific word recognition skills, (5) take the child on trips, (6) build a reading atmosphere for the child, (7) encourage the child to join the public library, (8) buy and make word games and puzzles for the child, (9) praise the child, and (10) give the child responsibilities which he is capable of taking. A sequence of specific word recognition skills and grade levels, an Afro-American vocabulary list, and references are included. (CM)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED034668
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1969
record_format eric
spellingShingle Improving the Meaning Vocabulary of Inner-City Children.
Green, Margaret Baker
Black Dialects
Disadvantaged
Disadvantaged Youth
Language Handicaps
Language Skills
Parent Role
School Role
Verbal Development
Vocabulary Development
Word Recognition
Improving the Meaning Vocabulary of Inner-City Children. Green, Margaret Baker Black Dialects Disadvantaged Disadvantaged Youth Language Handicaps Language Skills Parent Role School Role Verbal Development Vocabulary Development Word Recognition Strengthening and changing the curriculum to meet the needs of the inner-city child must be done by recognizing both the cultural aspects of the child's environment and the actual problems that he faces rather than by imposing traditional middle-class values, activities, and language. Steps suggested to both the teacher and the parent for improving the meaning vocabulary of inner-city children are (1) talk to the child, (2) listen to the child, (3) read to the child, (4) teach sequentially specific word recognition skills, (5) take the child on trips, (6) build a reading atmosphere for the child, (7) encourage the child to join the public library, (8) buy and make word games and puzzles for the child, (9) praise the child, and (10) give the child responsibilities which he is capable of taking. A sequence of specific word recognition skills and grade levels, an Afro-American vocabulary list, and references are included. (CM)
title Improving the Meaning Vocabulary of Inner-City Children.
topic Black Dialects
Disadvantaged
Disadvantaged Youth
Language Handicaps
Language Skills
Parent Role
School Role
Verbal Development
Vocabulary Development
Word Recognition
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED034668