Quiz 6: Understanding Vocabulary Teaching and Acquisition Quiz 6: Understanding Vocabulary Teaching and Acquisition 1 / 51. When introducing new vocabulary, which of the following is an effective strategy to help students understand the meaning without relying solely on translation? Using visuals (pictures, realia), miming, and providing context. Writing the word on the board and asking students to guess. Giving a long, complex dictionary definition. Having students copy the word repeatedly. 2 / 52. Which of these strategies is most effective for recycling and reviewing vocabulary to help students retain it long-term? Asking students to silently reread their vocabulary lists. Using spaced repetition, vocabulary games, and personalized tasks. Ignoring previously taught words to focus on new ones. Only testing the words once at the end of a unit. 3 / 53. A teacher wants to encourage independent vocabulary acquisition in learners. Which of the following is a good strategy to promote this? Providing students with a complete list of all words they will ever need. Discouraging the use of dictionaries to prevent reliance. Only teaching vocabulary that is directly related to the current textbook chapter. Teaching students how to use context clues, vocabulary notebooks, and flashcards effectively. 4 / 54. Why is it beneficial to teach vocabulary in context rather than as isolated words? It reduces the need for any practice activities. It makes the lesson longer and more challenging. It only benefits advanced learners. It helps students understand how the word is used naturally and makes it more memorable. 5 / 55. A student is struggling to remember new words. What independent strategy could you suggest they use outside of class? Creating flashcards with the word, its meaning, and an example sentence. Avoiding reading in English to prevent encountering new words. Waiting until the next lesson to ask about forgotten words. Only relying on the teacher to review words. Your score isThe average score is 60% 0% Restart quiz