Word Relationships - Parent Activity Guide

Help your seventh grader understand the power of word choice

What is Your Child Learning?

Seventh graders learn to analyze word relationships, including how words with similar dictionary meanings can have very different emotional associations. They study denotation (literal meaning), connotation (emotional associations), analogies (word relationship puzzles), and how word choice affects tone and meaning.

On Florida's FAST assessment, students must identify connotations, complete analogies, and explain how an author's word choice creates specific effects.

Key Vocabulary

Denotation: The literal, dictionary definition of a word
Connotation: The emotional feelings or associations a word suggests (positive, negative, or neutral)
Analogy: A comparison showing similar relationships between word pairs
Nuance: Subtle differences in meaning between similar words
Tone: The author's attitude toward the subject, conveyed through word choice

Quick Example: Same Meaning, Different Feelings

All these words mean "thin" - but notice how different they feel:

scrawny (negative) --- thin (neutral) --- slender (positive)

A person described as "slender" sounds graceful; the same person described as "scrawny" sounds unhealthy. That's the power of connotation!

Activities to Try at Home

📰 News Headline Analysis

Look at how different news sources describe the same event. Compare headlines and discuss:

Example: Compare "Protesters gathered" vs. "Mob assembled" - same event, very different impressions!

🎬 Movie Review Comparison

Read reviews of the same movie - one positive and one negative. Focus on word choice:

🛒 Advertisement Word Hunt

Advertisers are experts at connotation! Analyze commercials or ads together:

Tip: Car commercials are great for this - notice words like "refined," "bold," "sophisticated."

🎮 Analogy Games

Practice analogies as a family game - take turns creating and solving them:

📝 "Said is Dead" Game

Replace boring words with more specific ones and discuss the differences:

Discuss: "What's the difference between 'trudged' and 'strolled'? Both mean walked!"

Questions to Ask Your Child

Parent Tip: Connotation in Everyday Life

We use connotation all the time without realizing it. When your child says a test was "hard," ask: "Would you call it challenging, difficult, or impossible? Each word suggests a different level of struggle."

When describing people, notice how word choice reveals attitude: Is someone "confident" or "arrogant"? "Thrifty" or "cheap"? "Curious" or "nosy"? Same basic meaning - very different feelings!

Common Analogy Relationship Types

Synonym & Antonym

  • HAPPY : JOYFUL (synonyms)
  • HOT : COLD (antonyms)

Part to Whole

  • PAGE : BOOK
  • WHEEL : CAR

Degree (Intensity)

  • WARM : HOT (less to more)
  • ANNOYED : FURIOUS

Cause & Effect

  • PRACTICE : IMPROVEMENT
  • RAIN : FLOOD

Informacion para Padres (Spanish Summary)

Que esta aprendiendo su hijo? Los estudiantes de septimo grado aprenden sobre las relaciones entre palabras, incluyendo DENOTACION (significado literal) y CONNOTACION (asociaciones emocionales).

Conceptos clave:

Ejemplo: "Barato" y "economico" tienen el mismo significado basico, pero "barato" suena negativo (mala calidad) mientras que "economico" suena positivo (buen valor).

Actividad en casa: Cuando vean anuncios juntos, pregunte: "Por que usaron esta palabra en lugar de otra? Que sentimiento crea?"