Pollard Memorial Library (Lowell)

The vocabulary teacher's book of lists, Edward B. Fry

Classification
1
Content
1
Mapped to
1
Label
The vocabulary teacher's book of lists, Edward B. Fry
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Index
no index present
Literary form
non fiction
Main title
The vocabulary teacher's book of lists
Oclc number
55126029
Responsibility statement
Edward B. Fry
Summary
Edward Fry has the uncanny as well as canny (choose your word) ability to take a complex concept in this case vocabulary and present it in a form useful to students and teachers. Allen Berger, Heckert Professor of Reading and Writing, Miami University. The Vocabulary Teachers Book of Lists will serve as an invaluable reference tool to any instructor involved in teaching English or designing project work. The content spans the grades from 4th up to college and is characteristic of Edward Frys contribution to be both comprehensive and creative. Pat Costigan, learning consultant, Bordentown Regional School District, New Jersey. Teachers who want to mix test-prep with life-success-prep will welcome The Vocabulary Teachers Book of Lists as an easy-to-use resource for lively lessons. They'll enjoy the wry humor of Dr. Edward Frys teaching suggestions as he marries word work to wordplay. Lee Mountain, professor, curriculum and instruction, College of Education, University of Houston. The Vocabulary Teachers Book of Lists offers content for literally hundreds of vocabulary improvement lessons for elementary and secondary teachers, self-improving adults, home schoolers, and students studying for their SATs. While there are dozens of shorter high interest lists of words, the core of the book is based on Latin and Greek roots and prefixes. But the largest list is Homophones. In fact it is one of the largest lists of homophones you will ever use. This list, like many others, is appropriate for spelling lessons or writers reference as well as vocabulary improvement. There are two dozen teaching methods in the Methods chapter and teaching suggestions to help improve reading and writing are scattered throughout the book. The lessons can be as short as a word-a-day or as long as a school year. The range of difficulty can go from upper elementary to college freshman classes, and be as diverse as adult education to English language learners
Table of contents
Interesting lists -- Roots -- Word origins -- Subjects -- Writing -- Foreign words-exonyms -- Spelling, abbreviations, and phonics -- Measurement and geography -- Methods -- Affixes and roots -- Homophones

Incoming Resources