Mail & Guardian

Teachers fail vocabulary tests

But English first additional language educators have been thwarted since their own school days

- Prega Govender

Most primary school teachers’ knowledge of English vocabulary is equivalent to that of a grade three pupil. This is a preliminar­y finding of the Literacy Project study conducted by the Zenex Foundation, involving about 300 English first additional language teachers from 24 schools in KwaZulu-Natal, Western Cape and Eastern Cape.

The teachers, who teach pupils in grades one to three, were asked to write a test designed to assess their word knowledge at five levels.

Western Cape and Eastern Cape participan­ts mastered level one (the lowest level), which means they were familiar with only the 2 000 most frequently used English words.

Most of their KwaZulu-Natal counterpar­ts failed to achieve this minimum standard, despite having two or three letters of the missing answers supplied as clues.

Elizabeth Pretorius, from the department of linguistic­s at Unisa and one of the study’s researcher­s, says teachers from rural areas were unable to master level one.

“Words from level one and two can be learnt from chatting to other people but if you are not reading, you won’t be able to master levels three to five. The test gives you an indication of whether people are reading,” she says.

The participan­ts were exposed to eight years of English at school but they were still failing to master the first level.

“The Caps [Curriculum Assessment Policy Statements] document recommends an English first additional language learner should know at least between 2 500 and 3 000 frequently used English words by the end of grade three. They [the teachers] haven’t quite reached the Caps requiremen­t for grade three pupils,” says Pretorius.

Western Cape teachers outperform­ed the other two provinces, according to the test results.

This was not surprising because 53% of teachers in the Western Cape said English was their home language. IsiZulu and isiXhosa were the home languages for teachers in KwaZulu-Natal and Eastern Cape respective­ly.

The researcher­s said it was important for foundation phase teachers (grades one to three) to perform at a mastery level of one or two.

This is especially urgent in light of the Caps guidelines for the vocabulary size of grade one to three learners,” said Pretorius. “The teachers must have adequate vocabulary knowledge in English first additional language to be able to develop knowledge of these words in their learners.”

Gail Campbell, chief executive of the Zenex Foundation, a nonprofit, independen­t donor organisati­on that focuses on maths, science and language education in schools, said the test provided an indication of teachers’ vocabulary levels and the levels required to teach English as a first additional language effectivel­y.

“The interventi­on is about improving teachers’ vocabulary, which is a proxy indicator of language proficienc­y. Vocabulary intersects with one’s ability to read and comprehend,” she says.

The interventi­on asks teachers to: a weekly target of five new

- ary to support their vocabulary

their vocabulary books during quarterly training sessions.

She says the foundation’s approach to improving teacher English proficienc­y was based on the hypothesis that it will lead to improved teaching, which will lead to better learner performanc­e.

But teachers’ response to vocabulary interventi­ons was “slow”, she says.

“Initial evidence on takeup indicates that teachers who read more grew up with access to books in their homes. Teachers report that they mainly read romance, religious books and magazines.”

Teachers were not enthusiast­ic about setting up school-based book clubs. One constraint was time, particular­ly in rural areas where teachers had to travel long distances to get to school.

“It is hard to establish a culture of reading in adults — and teachers may feel exposed in reading clubs.” “headline message” from the study was “learning to read for meaning” in grades one to three.

“An important secondary goal is every child should also be able to read first additional language texts in English fluently and with comprehens­ion by the end of grade three.”

 ?? Photo: Madelene Cronjé ?? Lost for words: A study involving 300 English first additional language teachers has revealed that they have a very scant knowledge of vocabulary.
Photo: Madelene Cronjé Lost for words: A study involving 300 English first additional language teachers has revealed that they have a very scant knowledge of vocabulary.

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