I love teaching vocabulary. I think its one of areas SLPs specialize in. I especially love teaching the concepts of vocabulary to early elementary aged students. Synonyms, antonyms, associations, multiple meaning words, categories and more! I have a hodge-podge of visuals I had made over the years to teach students these skills. Over the last few weeks I tried to make them more streamlined and use the same symbols to be more consistent.
When I posted this picture on Instagram I had a lot of you asking for it! I wanted to make sure to post about it so you can get your hands on it if you need it for your speech office!
This packet contains 11 pages of visuals to support vocabulary instruction. You can use these as posters in your speech office. I like to place posters where they can be easily pulled off the wall when we are targeting that skill.
Vocabulary visuals included: compare/contrast, synonyms, antonyms, associations, categories, what doesn’t belong, and multiple meaning words.
You can find the Visuals for Vocabulary Instruction on my tpt site. This document was created using Smarty Symbols. Smarty Symbols is a registered Trademark of Smarty Ears, 2013. All rights reserved to Smarty Ears.
What do you use for teaching vocabulary? Would you use this? Leave a comment below and I’ll send a free copy to someone who wants it!
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Amy Robets says
These look so awesome! These would help so much! I have so many students who struggle with these concept. My students can usually tell me how items are alike, but have such difficulty explaining differences. And multiple meaning words are really difficult! These visuals would be perfect!!
Staci Jackson says
I love teaching vocab because it has a more direct impact on the academic success than some of the more subtle skills like artic and social skills. And I am a word nerd!
Debra Davis says
This looks fantastic. I can see me using it from K thru 5.
Anne says
Vocabulary is my favorite thing to work on in my Language groups. This would be a great resource!
Leslie Knight says
I would LOVE to have this for my language students !!!!! Thanks for sharing and always making things practical and great resources for any therapy room 🙂
alison weigand says
Wow. this is fantastic. Working with the hearing impaired and deaf populations visual cues are part of the way that they learn more so than other students. This would make a fantastic addition to my bag of therapy tricks!
Kerri says
These look great! I don’t have a lot of wall space, so I think I would put them in an easel binder to keep on my table.
Shari says
I love Kerri’s idea! This would make it easier for my students with autism to focus only on what I wanted them to 🙂
Jessica Smith says
I love teaching vocab also! I have lots of ELL students who this is particularly important for, and I believe it has such a strong academic impact. I’ve made some visuals, but would love these as they are consistent and clear!
Sharon Swindell says
These are great! I have a hodgepodge collection of different visuals that I have used over the years because I know visual are crucial! This collection would be great to have up all year round, to be used as anchor charts! Vocabulary instruction is an ongoing process and to have these available all the time would be outstanding. Thank you for making them available!
Jennifer Holbrook says
I was just trying to find a visual for multiple meanings for two kids who cannot remember to think about a noun and action. I would love love love this! I could use this for so many of my kids. I use a hodge lodge of materials for vocabulary prompts, so it would be great to have similar visuals!
Sara says
I use this same concept but I don’t have a pretty visual for it. This is something I’ve been looking for! Our kiddos often need that visual when trying to describe.
Kristen says
Those look awesome! I currently use a combination of posters from a variety of sources, so it would be great to use ones that were more consistent. I am already brainstorming how I am going to set up my new room/walls next year! Too early?
Caryn Chalmin says
I would love to have these resources to help with vocabulary teaching. I work in an elementary school where a lot of my students don’t get a lot of exposure to many experiences outside of school. Vocabulary teaching is essential for their success in school. Your visual aids are amazing! Thank you for sharing!
Miki Bollinger says
I would love to have one to try with my students!
Jill says
Oh my goodness! I teach vocabulary with sooo many of my groups and know these visuals would be so incredibly helpful for so many of them! Thank you for taking the time to put them together!
Sarah says
This is amazing! I’m just finishing up graduate school and as I’m thinking about starting my CF this is just the kind of visual that I am gathering so I have a whole bag of tricks to start with!
adminSRN says
Hi Sarah! You are my random winner! Email me at speechroomnews@gmail.com
Amy Gledhill says
These look great, visuals can make all the difference with some of my students.
emily says
I am a big fan of visuals like these to teach skills I keep sets of them on binder rings so I can flip through for the one I need. I love smarty symbols so these look great! Right now I teach using the EET and a focus on strategy instruction: how to tackle and analyze and organize new words. I am also looking at SOS (strategy based instruction) by Ruthann Jarvis and I think it looks great for the older kids I see.
Olga says
I have to use pictures of items, and I teach them about Thinking Maps to help them visualize connections.
Tracy says
I have used the EET framework, but it is all in word form. I really need something with pictures for my younger kiddos! This looks perfect!!
Crystal says
Would love to have this! Always love your products and ideas!
Glenda Ziglar says
Vocabulary is so much fun to work on and so important to a child’s success in school. Your posters would be a great teaching tool. Thanks so much for offering these to us.
Stephanie K says
I work on naming the class, features and functions a lot.
Jen K says
This is great! I love the visuals for compare and contrast. I have so many kids that struggle with these 2 concepts. I’ll ask for one and get the other and vice versa. I think these would be wonderful in my speech room! I’m definitely checking them out on TPT.
Rhonda says
Vocabulary is my favorite language area! There are so many ways to make it fun! I would love to have these visuals to tie all my activities together!
Carly Fowler says
I love these visuals! When I teach vocabulary I am always drawing pictures or writing on my whiteboard. It works for the time being until the next lesson when I have to draw or write the same thing over and over again. I have these on my wishlist as I know I would use them over and over again!
Nicole Conforti says
I love these visuals! I would use them everyday for my elementary and middle school students.
CJ says
Wonderful! I’m finally starting to find my groove on some things but not quite yet for teaching vocab! This would be a great jump start for me =)
Paige says
These are wonderful. They would be perfect to help teach our K-5 vocabulary. Thanks so much for all the materials you provide. I use many of them daily.
Kelly says
I would use this all the time. I love working on vocabulary.
Erin Diggins says
Vocabulary Is one of my smart goals this year. I work on it in some fashion with nearly all of my kids from preK to 5th grade. These would also be great for push-in sessions and co- teaching with classroom teachers.
Kara says
Love vocab as well and these visuals difinitely bet my drawings!
Kristen says
I have been working on comparing and contrasting with my first graders recently to tie in with their curriculum. These supports would definitely drive the concepts home for them. I am excited to use them!
chnhrsch says
I love using visuals and these would be great!!!
Beth says
I love all of your products!! Wish I could purchase them. My students have really enjoy the EET activities that I have purchased. I follow your website looking for creative ideas-especially now that our school division is in the final 9 weeks of school and the weather is beginning to warm up!
Thanks for always providing us with high quality materials to use with our students.
jordan laine says
I am SO excited to see these posted! Creating visuals similar to these has been on my to-do list for the past year and I have obviously not gotten around to it! I love using comparing/contrasting and categorizing for teaching vocabulary, can’t wait to try these out!
Sara says
OH this is PERFECT. My language kiddos would really enjoy this, it would help drive home these concepts even more!!!
cassie says
Great idea. I could really see this coming in handy with a lot of my students on the autism spectrum.
Brandi says
These are great! Many of my students are visual learners and I have been trying to create my own posters, but they look nothing like these. Thank you for creating such an awesome product!!
Denise C says
These look so awesome, Jenna! I’m always working on vocabulary with my students and would use these all the time!
Danielle says
I work on these skills with kids from k-5. I usually draw/write on a whiteboard but would love to have better, consistent visuals!
Deborah K says
I use a lot of books with my pre-k classes & manipulatives to go with them.
Hannah C says
I’m doing a lot of similarities/differences with my kiddos, and have been trying to figure out a concrete way to teach it- your visual breaks it down so nicely! Your packet looks like one of the most useful things I’ve seen on TPT!
Nicole says
I found a describing map in a Super Duper Descripto Bingo workbook that I use frequently. My students have always enjoyed using it because it can be laid out as a blank framework and they draw in the missing symbols then explain what each symbol means. They get so excited when they come in the room and I have drawn parts of the describing map on the white board and they have to fill in the rest. They even like to teach it to other students. After much use I can tell when they are visualizing the map in their head.We use it for descriptions, comparing, contrasting, and definitions.
Natalie says
These are wonderful! I have used them already, and look forward to pulling them out again, as needed! Thanks Jenna!
Jennifer Drake says
As I work with middle school students, I utilize Google Drive and images to create vocabulary pictures either for explicit or literature vocabulary. I create a table and insert the images, vocabulary, part of speech, or tailor it to their goal. Individual students and whole classes can use the pictures!
sarah says
I work with school age children across three schools and it can at times be difficult to find suitable vocabulary games/ resources to suit their needs. Your resouces would be a welcome addition to my therapy tools.
guiyoung says
I want to have this for my language students !!!!! Thanks for sharing and always making things practical and great resources for any therapy room.. thanks for your help..
kate weiss says
Fabulous! Would definitely love to use these with my students! They have many gaps in their vocabulary due to neglect and benefit from targeting vocabulary each session. It’s a difficult task, especially when they do not have the background knowledge. I use EET nearly everyday and these visuals would really help to bridge some of the gaps and move them towards comparing and contrasting the words that they have been learning to define and descibe.
Elpida says
Love teaching vocabulary and semantic development with my kiddos too!!
Kara harney says
These materials would be so wonderful to have. Having worked with the D/HH population, concepts of vocabulary need to look just like this! The visual support provided through these materials would be so beneficial!
Karen Oxendine says
I also use EET and in the last few years I have used compare & contrast activities more & more with every age group at the elementary level. I also suggest a lot of visuals for use in the gen ed classrooms through our Student Assistance Team /RTI so this would be beneficial!
Jenali says
This is so awesome! I love the idea. I would love to get my hands on these for next year. This is already bookmarked ☺️ I think my kids would really benefit from these.
Maggie Roesch says
I use a combination of things. I use Visualizing and verbalizing techniques and materials, attribute items from online sources, and many other materials too many to mention. Whatever works best for the level of student.
Jena says
This would be cool to make a bookmark out of somehow so the kids have it with them at all times while reading.
Laura Johnson says
I would love to have a copy. This looks great! I’ve created my own in the past but nothing this detailed.
Beth says
I use some similar visuals for describing but I don’t have any visuals for synonyms antonyms and multiple meanings. This packet would be great! Work materials are always wonderful!
JenniBee says
I currently use a variety of visual from the tpt and other blog sites. Saying that, you can never have enough visuals!
Yes! I would love these visual aids to support my oral language kiddos! Comparing and contrasting is one of the most difficult concepts for our little kiddos to understand. I find, I love to offer them a variety of visuals and other support aids, hoping one will grab out at them and it will all come together!
Tazeem says
These ideas are awesome. I’m struggling to stretch the group and widen their vocabulary. Yes please I would love a free copy for the groups I work with. Many thanks and keep up the super support.
Camille says
Beautifully done. I would love to use these effective visuals. Your use of color and images is appealing.
Karen says
These visuals looks great ! So many different ways I could use them. Would love a copy!
Cindy Hittner says
Your visuals look great and would help me connect with my language and speech elementary school students.