Academic Language - Science
Workshop
- 9:30- 1:00
- Dr. Norm Herr
- Location: Education 2103
- Resources for the seminar
- Survey
- Acdemic Language Discussion - E237387A27
"Academic language is the language used in textbooks, in classrooms, and on tests. It is different in structure and vocabulary from the everyday spoken English of social interactions. Many students who speak English well have trouble comprehending the academic language used in high school and college classrooms. Low academic language skills have been shown to be associated with low academic performance in a variety of educational settings.
The main barrier to student comprehension of texts and lectures is low academic vocabulary knowledge. Academic vocabulary is sub-technical vocabulary. In other words, it is not the technical vocabulary of a particular academic discipline. Academic vocabulary is used across all academic disciplines to teach about the content of the discipline. For example, before taking chemistry, no students know the technical words used in chemistry. But the underprepared students also don't know the vocabulary used to teach the chemistry concepts. Underprepared students are unfamiliar with words like evaluation, theory, hypothesis, assumption, capacity, validate. Professors assume students comprehend such academic vocabulary, but such vocabulary is not often used in the everyday spoken English of many students.
Academic vocabulary is based on more Latin and Greek roots than is everyday spoken English vocabulary. In addition, academic lectures and texts tend to use longer, more complex sentences than are used in spoken English." Source
References
- The Sourcebook for Teaching Science
- Making Science Accessible to English Learners: A Guidebook for Teachers