Thursday, March 10, 2022

Vocabulary Instruction on Doctor's Orders

A man at a desk surrounded by books, he is asleep with his head on his work, he is holding his spectacles in his hand.

You can also listen to this blog here:

https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lexonik-insights/episodes/Vocabulary-instruction-on-doctors-orders-e1mtlbm/a-a8e5r4m


Updated 04/03/2026

A man is getting ready for bed when there’s a knock on the front door. He goes downstairs and there on the doorstep is a snail with a clipboard. “I understand you’re thinking about changing your energy supplier,” begins the snail. The man gives the snail an angry look and kicks him down the road. Six months later, same time of night, there’s another knock. Again, the man goes downstairs, opens the door and the snail says, “So what was that all about then?”.

Whenever a snail pops up in a joke, you’re waiting for a punchline about speed or time, right? However, with a couple of tweaks, our anecdotal snail could be starring in a modern-day Aesop fable about resilience.

The Resilience Gap: From Junior Doctors to School Pupils

Over half-term, we binged on ‘This is Going to Hurt’, the BBC adaptation of Adam Kay’s best-selling account of life as a junior doctor, so resilience has been much on my mind.

In a recent interview, Ben Whishaw (who played Kay) mentioned having to absorb a whole raft of medical jargon. Not surprising, given that medical students are expected to pick up around 5,000 subject-specific words during their training. And this fact made me think about another, possibly less obvious, group for whom resilience is key – schoolchildren.

In ‘Closing the Vocabulary Gap’, Alex Quigley informs us that 2,000 words make up 80% of our spoken language but, to succeed at GCSE level, students need a word bank of around 50,000.

Not only is this around 25 times more words than are used in everyday conversation, it is 10 times more than the 5,000 words medical students are confronted with. Furthermore, most often these will be complex, subject-specific words which rarely appear outside their academic disciplines.

This is why, whenever we embark on a new Lexonic training session, we always include some empathetic exercises to make our delegates aware of the kind of challenges their pupils face on a daily basis, and the resilience needed to deal with them.

Fostering Resilience Through "Thinking and Linking"

So how can teachers close this vocabulary divide?

At Lexonic, we foster resilience with regard to understanding language in very specific ways. There is a strong etymological element to our training – games and activities which focus on the origins of language and encourage a morphemic analysis of words, both familiar and unfamiliar. This in turn develops students’ metacognitive skills, and, in so doing, provides a strategy with which to approach unfamiliar vocabulary.

Basically, it’s just thinking and linking, and often these links come from unexpected sources. This usually happens when students have attended the first few weeks of [Lexonic Advance] and, as vocabulary detectives, are ready to take a risk with their ideas. The moment when their attempted definition begins with “I’m not sure, but….”

Here are a few real-world examples:

  • Like the student who looked blankly at the word ‘miscellaneous’ before recognising and linking ‘misc’ to a tab on Minecraft.
  • Or another, stumped by ‘rejuvenation’, who noticed that the ‘juve’ looked very much like the Juvey-cops who tracked down the teenagers in ‘Unwind’, the class reader.
  • Or, bringing us bang up to date, the student who worked out the meaning of ‘bilateral’ with reference to a bicycle and the line on a lateral flow test.

It’s a great skill to develop, and once you start analysing vocabulary in this way (a skill embedded in our Wordology platform), the connections will keep on coming. One of our Lexonic teachers on the south coast shared a powerful anecdote about an ex-student who popped back from university to thank her for the lessons that had turned his life around. I’m not sure if he was studying medicine, but for him, clearly, it didn’t hurt a bit.

Teach Your Students to "Think and Link"

Our programmes are built on this powerful, proven method of morphemic analysis. We give students the tools to build their resilience and decode the 50,000 words they need for success.

Book a consultation today to discuss your school’s needs.

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Equip learners with essential reading skills and a rich vocabulary for lifelong success.