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Teaching Vocabulary Through Different Learning Styles

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Nowadays vocabulary teaching seems of especially great importance. The English language is becoming more and more popular all over the world in all spheres of social life. Therefore any individual who wants to succeed in our business world has to be able to speak English.

English teaching/learning is a hard and many-sided process, where both participants – learners and teachers – should follow certain rules. Only through mutual co-operation are good results possible.

Knowledge of vocabulary seriously influences the knowledge of the foreign language in general. The more words a person knows the more secure he/she feels himself/herself, the more willing he/she is to communicate.

How to memorize new words? How to make it easier for the students to perceive new words and to keep them in mind for a long time?

According to the physiologists, there are three ingrained learning styles of perceiving new information, so-called VAK styles: visual, auditory, and kinaesthetic.

The teacher can try to help his/her students to define their styles of perception and to facilitate them to memorize new foreign words using the techniques most appropriate for their learning styles.

Visual style

This style suggests that students turn the words into pictures as they have a great visual memory. 35% of students have such style.

Auditory style

This style suggests that students perceive the world through sounds of voice, its tone, and timbre. 25% of students possess this style.

Kinaesthetic style

This style allows students to perceive the information through feelings, emotions, instincts, contacts; their muscles play a huge role in learning.  40% of students have such style.

In reality, the pure type is rather rare, however, it is often the case that students have a blended style – visual-kinaesthetic or visual-auditory. Knowing the students’ style the teacher can choose the most appropriate tools and tasks to teach the students.

I have been working as a teacher for more than 14 years and have collected a number of techniques that have been extremely useful in helping to teach vocabulary.

1. Draw a picture or diagram and divide words into groups

For example, you can draw a body and write the parts of the body, or draw a flat and write the names of the rooms etc.

This technique works perfectly for visuals, as drawing the pictures stimulates the creative thinking what leads to easier memorisation.

It is important to draw pictures and words not only on the paper but in the air with your hands, too!

2. Write words on sticky notes with translations, synonyms and examples

Then stick them in places where your students spend the most time. Encourage students to take a look and revise the words every time they’re near. When you are done with this paper, replace it with a new one. This is another good technique for the visuals.

3. Create word associations

Encourage students to make their own word associations. The teacher can give some hints, however, the students should create their own. The point is that the word will be memorized and in years they will remember it!

For example, many years ago I memorized the word ‘syringe’ by associating it with Syria. There is no logic, but the word is still in my memory.

Another example is the word ‘cumbersome’ – the first association I got was with ‘cucumber’. I imagined a long, bulky cucumber, which is difficult to hide.

This technique is as appropriate for visuals as it is for auditory and kinaesthetics, as visuals will draw a picture in their minds (cumbersome-cucumber), the auditory will memorize using sound association (syringe-Syria), but the kinaesthetic will feel it emotionally.

4. Read books

Get the students to read books and write down new words, learning them in the context of the book. The visuals will be able to remember not only the word but even the page where this word was printed.

5. Listen to the audio

For more experienced learners. it may be useful to listen to audio and focus on new words. This technique is most useful for auditory learners.

6. Work with a dictionary

One of the best techniques to expand vocabulary is to write down compound nouns from the dictionaries, consisting of two nouns: headache (head and ache), lighthouse (light and house), snowman (snow and man), etc. This technique could be useful for visual and kinaesthetic learners.

7. Look for common everyday words

There are many words – names of big companies, famous groups or song titles – which are familiar to us all. Many of them have different meanings when used as part of the English language. The teacher’s goal is to help to distinguish that it has some meaning and it can be used in English learning.

Auditory learners can definitely benefit from this technique, as it is based on sounds, although visual learners may associate words with brand logos, etc.

Which methods do you find most effective when teaching vocabulary?


Helen Stepanova is an English language teacher, teacher trainer, and author, currently working as a Business English teacher in Latvia. Here she talks about teaching vocabulary using different learning styles.

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