Grade 6 English Language Arts | FL B.E.S.T. Standard: ELA.6.V.1.3
Apply knowledge of context clues, figurative language, word relationships, reference materials, and/or background knowledge to determine the connotative and denotative meaning of words and phrases, appropriate to grade level.
By the end of this unit, students will be able to:
| Term | Definition | Student-Friendly Explanation |
|---|---|---|
| Context Clues | Words or phrases surrounding an unknown word that hint at its meaning | The detective words around an unfamiliar word that help you figure it out |
| Denotation | The literal, dictionary definition of a word | What the word actually means - the basic definition |
| Connotation | The emotional feeling or association a word carries | How a word makes you feel - the positive or negative vibe |
| Root | The base part of a word that carries the main meaning | The core part of a word that other parts attach to |
| Prefix | A word part added to the beginning of a root | Letters added BEFORE a word that change its meaning |
| Suffix | A word part added to the end of a root | Letters added AFTER a word that change its meaning or part of speech |
| Multiple-Meaning Word | A word that has more than one definition | A word that means different things in different contexts |
| Root | Origin | Meaning | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| aud | Latin | hear | audience, audible, auditorium |
| bio | Greek | life | biography, biology, antibiotic |
| dict | Latin | say, speak | dictate, predict, dictionary |
| graph/gram | Greek | write | paragraph, telegram, autograph |
| port | Latin | carry | transport, portable, export |
| spec/spect | Latin | see, look | inspect, spectator, perspective |
| tract | Latin | pull, drag | attract, subtract, tractor |
| rupt | Latin | break | interrupt, erupt, corrupt |
| Day | Focus | Activities |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Types of Context Clues | Introduce CLUES strategy (Context, Look for clues, Understand, Examine, Substitute). Use Student Concept Worksheet. |
| 2 | Greek and Latin Roots | Teach root/prefix/suffix analysis. Practice breaking down unfamiliar words. |
| 3 | Denotation vs. Connotation | Explore how words with similar denotations have different connotations and effects on tone. |
| 4 | Multiple-Meaning Words | Practice using context to select the correct meaning. Complete Practice Worksheet. |
| 5 | Assessment | Administer FAST Format Quiz. Review and reteach as needed. |
Teach students this step-by-step approach:
Circle the unknown word
Look at the surrounding sentences
Understand what type of clue is given (definition, example, synonym, antonym, inference)
Examine the clue to form a prediction
Substitute your prediction - does it make sense?
Teach the "Break It Down" method:
1. Identify any prefix (beginning)
2. Identify the root (middle)
3. Identify any suffix (ending)
4. Combine the meanings
Example: un (not) + break (break) + able (able to be) = "not able to be broken"
Create a spectrum line from negative to positive. Place synonyms along the spectrum to show how similar words carry different feelings:
Negative -------- Neutral -------- Positive
stubborn -------- determined -------- persistent -------- strong-willed
cheap -------- inexpensive -------- affordable -------- thrifty
Give students passages and ask: "Why did the author choose THIS word instead of another?" Have them identify the connotation and explain how a different word choice would change the meaning or tone of the passage.
Correction: Context clues often provide hints, not definitions. Students must make inferences and use multiple clues together. Teach them to make educated guesses and verify with substitution.
Correction: Roots provide a hint about meaning, but prefixes, suffixes, and context significantly change the word. "Dictate" and "contradict" both have "dict" (say/speak) but mean very different things.
Correction: Word choice significantly affects tone and meaning. Saying someone is "childish" vs. "childlike" communicates very different messages even though both relate to children.
Correction: Words have multiple meanings, and context determines which definition applies. "Bank" can mean a financial institution OR the side of a river. Students must use context to select the appropriate meaning.
On the FAST assessment, vocabulary questions typically ask students to:
Key Strategy: Train students to always return to the passage and find evidence for their answer. The correct meaning is determined by HOW the word is used in THAT specific context.