TAG | synonyms
21
A Different Use for Word Walls
No comments · Posted by Sara (readers1) in Language in the Classroom
By Sara Finegan
My colleague Colleen hates word walls and recently told our principal that she refuses to have one anymore. What bothers her about word walls is the discrepency between the amount of time and energy she devotes to creating one and the amount of time and energy used by students when they are there.
As Colleen points out, there’s something incredibly irritating about a kid in June, who’s known about the existence of the word wall since October and still asks the teacher how to spell one of the words that is RIGHT THERE, not 10 feet away!
I agree. If the purpose of a word wall is to create a visible list of words to use for spelling, I want nothing to do with it. In my classroom, we post several different kinds of words, for several different uses.
Sight Words
One of the first lists of words you will find in my classroom are the month’s expected sight words. The words are some years written individually on index cards and some years typed onto colored paper, taped (blue painters tape, sticks well, won’t leave residue when removed) on our cupboard doors.
The kids keep each month’s list of sight words in a notebook as well, but we like a big list to be visible in the classroom for partners to go read during free or unstructured time.
Tip: I create a list of approximately 80 words per month for the kids to learn. They are multi-syllabic words, and usually all fit into a phonological pattern – October’s words this year, for example, all use the “e” sounds, both long and short. Every student tries to learn 20 of the words per week, so that by the end of the month, any kid in my classroom can walk up to the word wall and quickly read off every single one.
Several years ago, I became frustrated by the fact that although I was teaching powerful vocabulary, my students weren’t using it, or if they were, they were using it awkwardly. After about a month of gnashing my teeth and lecturing my kids about their lack of attention to my teaching, I stepped back and began to observe how they did use language in both written and oral expression.
Turned out, although they knew the words if they saw them in text, they didn’t know how to use them on their own. It’s one thing to recognize a word; it’s quite another to retrieve it and apply it in speech.
In order for a student with special needs to be able to use the vocabulary I teach, they need to be able to have a context. And that is what led to the second kind of word wall you might find in my classroom.
Words in Context
When I create a context-based word wall, I am setting up a system for kids to be able to see and practice the use of the words. This kind of word wall will group words by category or topic, rather than in alphabetical order or by grammatical form. Thus, you might find the following word groupings:

Synonyms and Precise Choices
We all know how difficult it can be to direct kids away from what I call “cotton ball words,” by which I mean the soft, fluffy, and really imprecise vocabulary they so willingly employ in speech and writing: words like “stuff”, “things”, “had”, “was”, “can”, “went”.
When we teach students that the use of precise language to convey ideas demonstrates intelligence and proficiency, we cannot expect them to be immediately able to retrieve the more powerful nouns and verbs we’d like them to be using. We have to show them their choices.
Thus, another type of word wall is one which is developed over time in the classroom, and customized based on the needs you see in your students. This wall of words will contain a topic heading and a list of words that can be used. For example, “Say”:
Or, we might have an entire section about “getting from one place to another quickly,” that has words such as: gallop, slide, run, trot, jog, race, fly, canter, zip, skate, roll. Or perhaps we need to use words that are more interesting than “good”, so we have a list that contains these words: excellent, fabulous, wonderful, terrific, lovely, magnificent, beautiful, fresh, tasty, sweet.
Now, Colleen’s complaint can still be repeated with these kinds of word walls. A list of words in and of itself is not going to lead to use or knowledge. But if we use the word wall regularly, so will the kids.
We Model How to Use the Wall
Kids are not as likely to look to a list of words for spelling help when they can just as easily ask someone. But they are likely to look to a list of words for vocabulary choices if we model how it’s done and get them in the habit.
When we are talking or writing, I will frequently pause as though I can’t think of a word. I use my “teacher is puzzled” face, and tell the kids I’m having trouble thinking of the right way to say something. They are always willing to help.
If I can describe to my students the kind of word I need, they will almost invariably go to the word wall in context and help me find one. Thus, for example:
- If I say “well, I want a word that shows how the Egyptian farmers made canals,” more than one student will glance at the wall and yell out “dug!” or “excavated!”
- If I indicate that I’m looking for a precise way to describe the kind of person Draco Malfoy is, I’ll get plenty of offers of “evil”, “nasty”, “cruel”, and “viscious”.
- And if I say I don’t want to repeat the word “important” in a paragraph, someone will help me find “essential” or “crucial”.
Once we get kids in the habit of looking to word walls for choices, they are far more likely to use them in their partner and independent work.
Of course, you just KNOW they will still ask you how to spell them!
![]()
demanding classroom · high expectations · learning disabled · modeling · rigor · rigorous instruction · sight words · special education · standards · synonyms · vocabulary · word wall
