Top 10 Ways to Use Wordle's Word Clouds for Classroom Lessons

Article by Jonathan Wylie (8,837 pts )
Edited & published by ElizabethWistrom (11,171 pts ) on Mar 8, 2010

Wordle.net is becoming one of the most used new technology tools for teachers. It is free, and versatile enough to be used in any area of the curriculum. This article contains ten of the best ideas for Wordle lessons in the classroom.

Believe it or not, incorporating Wordle lessons into your classroom routines is quick and easy! Below, you will find a list of ideas you can use in your classroom - today!

Lesson Ideas

1. Personal Narratives: Write, or copy and paste, a personal narrative into Wordle. Students will be able to see what is important to their peers from the words that are produced from the Wordle word clouds. Compare the words that are used most often by boys, or girls, by age group, or by class/grade level. These Wordle lessons make great displays outside a classroom.

2. Famous Speeches: Enter the text of a famous historical speech into Wordle. Analyze the results by looking at the most commonly used words, or even the words that are not used. What does this tell us about the orator and their intentions? Go to http://www.historyplace.com/speeches/previous.htm or http://www.americanrhetoric.com/top100speechesall.html for a list of historical speeches you may want to get started with.

3. Create a Wordle Gift: Mother's Day, Father's Day, Grandparent's Day, or even Teacher Appreciation Day, can all be celebrated with Wordle. Input your favorite adjectives for your chosen person, generate the word cloud, and add it to a greeting card, poster, calendar, or whatever else you choose. Remember, Wordle clouds can be downloaded as JPEGS or PNGS if you take a screenshot of your word cloud and save it to your computer, (command+shift+4 on a Mac will give you the option of saving a selcted portion of your screen).

4. Classroom Polls: Instead of your traditional bar graph or pictograph, try using Wordle to organize your data. What is the favorite color in your class? Have all students take turns at entering their favorite color in to Wordle and generate the resulting cloud. Bigger words = more popular colors. Repeat with ice cream flavors, pets, family members, etc.

5. Compare and Contrast: Use Wordle as a compare and contrast tool. Compare and contrast the word clouds of two or more students' writing, famous speeches, song lyrics, news reports, book reviews or whatever else you may need to compare in your classroom studies.

6. Student Profiles: I have done this with PowerPoint before, but recently saw someone do the same with Wordle lessons. Have all students in your class write a few positive adjectives about each of their classmates anonymously. Compile all the papers, input the adjectives for each student into Wordle, and generate a student profile word cloud to give back to the student. Children always enjoy this positive feedback exercise, and it can be a great end of year activity to take home from the last day of school.

7. Current Affairs Analysis: Copy and paste a news story into Wordle. What could the story have been about? Can you guess what the headline would have been? Where could have it taken place? These questions and more make this a worthy discussion exercise.

8. Wordle Word Walls: Brighten up your word walls with Wordle lessons. Students can brainstorm synonyms, antonyms, or definitions for their list of vocabulary words. Add your word clouds to your existing word wall work to help stimulate those higher thinking skills in your students. Keep a tally of the targeted vocabulary words that the children use in speech on a daily basis, and them to a Wordle cloud to show which are used most often.

9. Unit Review/Preview Posters: Students can create KWL charts on what they would like to learn and find out about a given topic. Alternatively, create word clouds at the end of a unit to summarize the key learning points or vocabulary from a given topic.

10. Historical Document Analysis: Have you ever wondered what the Magna Carta or Declaration of Independence would look like when pasted into Wordle? Try it and see. There will be lots of talking points from the resulting word cloud. What do you predict you will see? What themes can you identify? How does the word cloud fit in with the historical context of the document?

There are a lot of fun and interesting things you can do with Wordle lessons in the classroom. Challenge your students to come up with some uses of their own!

Thanks to http://jenuinetech.com, http://peterpappas.blogs.com, and http://ictlearning.net for their innovations with Wordle in education.

11 Comments

Showing page 1 of 2 (11 Comments)
Jul 29, 2010 11:26 AM
Answers
@Jill: 'I' and 'the' will appear in your Wordle as the largest, if they are the most common words. However, this is just a default setting and you can change that. Once your Wordle is displayed, select 'Language' and then 'remove common English words' and those types of words will be gone!

@Mojca: I'm sorry you wanted more specific examples. I tried just to give an overview of more general applications in order that it might trigger some specific examples for different teachers. However, I like your suggestion, and I will look into doing more specific examples in another article.
Jul 29, 2010 2:37 AM
JillBromen
Wordle for editing
Thanks for great ideas!
And, students can paste their own text into wordle and analyze need for sentence or word variety (does the word I or the come up largest?).
Jul 28, 2010 2:40 PM
Mojca
I miss the examples
Thanks for your great ideas.
Maybe you could show us one or more examples to each point.
Apr 27, 2010 9:20 PM
Becky
Wordle
Thanks for all the tips about wordle. I learned about it in my graduate program and now can use it with my students to make projects for open house.
Apr 19, 2010 11:59 AM
Current Affairs
Jan, one of the great things about Wordle is that it can be used in so many areas. I am glad that you have found a use for it with your students.
Apr 19, 2010 11:33 AM
Jan Krueger
Current Affairs Analysis
Being a CTE teacher specializing in Health Occupations Education I can see how the above can help with the number one issue impacting our study today related to current events- Health Care Reform. This will help my students analyze and synthesize the information that will impact them in their chosen fileds.
Apr 7, 2010 9:49 PM
Tagxedo
Check out Tagxedo if you want a built in save to jpeg option. It is just like Wordle but has some more options that let you save to jpeg and png, change your aspect ratios, pick a cloud shape, and more.
Mar 8, 2010 2:58 PM
JPEG Downloads
You are right Cindy, so thanks for correcting me. You can have a Wordle as a JPEG, but you need to take a screenshot of it and save that as a JPEG. I should have been more clear, but that is what I meant. I will edit the article accordingly so that it reflects this information.
Mar 8, 2010 1:57 PM
Cindy Harris
Wordle as jpegs
Wordle word clouds cannot be downloaded as jpegs. A screenshot is the best that a user can do to save their word cloud to use in projects.
Jan 25, 2010 8:39 AM
Thanks
Thanks EHarden, I am glad you found them useful. Let me know if you come up with any more good ideas of your own!
Showing page 1 of 2 (11 Comments)
 
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