To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee - Vocabulary

Vocabulary and word list from To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee - Vocabulary is added to our Vocab module


To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee - Vocabulary

In celebration of Empathy Day we've added key vocabulary from To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee to our Vocab module. Harper Lee's seminal novel is often used to teach classes about injustice and prejudice. This module will offer all the key terms from the book to your class, and provides a fantastic introduction to one of the great classics of American literature. Your learners can work on these 118 words now! View the list here

To Kill A Mockingbird by Harper Lee

This list follows hot on the heels of last week's Primary History: Chronological Understanding vocabulary!

How the Vocab module works

The Vocab module is simple. It's online. Each learner has their own username and password. You (the teacher) allocate the word list you'd like your class to work on. And away they go!

Mastering words

The programme learns how well your learners understand a word. Once they've mastered it, it goes into their mastered list! Each word has a 'definiton card' that supports their learning. This includes a definiton, an example sentence, synonyms, antonyms and an image. As they become more confident with a word, the definition card becomes more challenging. The image disappears - then the synomyms and antonyms, and finally the example sentence. If the learner makes a mistake, then the scaffolding returns - until they've mastered the word!

Each word has audio support so they are hearing and seeing the word as they learn it. And you are bringing the words to life with your class as you read the book or cover the topic!

Interrupting the forgetting curve

One amazing thing about the Vocab module is that the programme actually revisits words at key intervals. This is based on the science of memory and the famous work of Ebbinghaus. The programme interrupts the tendency to forget new things by overlearning at strategic intervals! This helps the words become firmly lodged in your learners long-term memories!

Short and regular sessions are best!

As a supplementary resource, Vocab is best used alongside your usual classroom activities. You might ask your class to spend 5 or 10 minutes a few times a week, either at home or at school. Some teachers like to use the programme from the front of the classroom too!

Which word list next?

If you are reading an amazing book with your class and you'd like us to create a word list for it, then let us know!

Arrange your 20-minute demo at a time to suit you.

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