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SangKienKinhNghiem.org
Tổng Hợp Hơn 1000 Sáng Kiến Kinh Nghiệm Chuẩn

SỞ GIÁO DỤC VÀ ĐÀO TẠO ĐỒNG NAI
Đơn vị TRƯỜNG TRUNG HỌC PHỔ THÔNG TRẤN BIÊN
Mã số: ................................

SÁNG KIẾN KINH NGHIỆM

DẠY TỪ VỰNG THÔNG QUA SỰ KẾT HỢP
GIỮA CÁC TỪ

Người thực hiện: VŨ NGUYỄN MINH NGỌC
Lĩnh vực nghiên cứu:
Quản lý giáo dục



Phương pháp dạy học bộ môn: Anh văn



Phương pháp giáo dục



Lĩnh vực khác:



Có đính kèm:


 Mô hình
 Phần mềm  Phim ảnh

Năm học: 2011 - 2012

 Hiện vật khác

SƠ LƯỢC LÝ LỊCH KHOA HỌC
1


Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

2


SƠ LƯỢC LÝ LỊCH KHOA HỌC
I. THÔNG TIN CHUNG VỀ CÁ NHÂN
1. Họ và tên: VŨ NGUYỄN MINH NGỌC
2. Ngày tháng năm sinh: 29- 12-1975
3. Nam, nữ: Nữ
4. Địa chỉ: 506 A2 Chung Cư Nguyễn Văn Trỗi - Quang Vinh – Biên Hòa
5. Điện thoại: 061.3826698
6. Fax:

(CQ)/

(NR); ĐTDĐ:


E-mail:

7. Chức vụ: Giáo viên
8. Đơn vị công tác: Trường THPT Trấn Biên
II. TRÌNH ĐỘ ĐÀO TẠO
- Học vị (hoặc trình độ chuyên môn, nghiệp vụ) cao nhất: cử nhân Anh văn
- Năm nhận bằng: 1998
- Chuyên ngành đào tạo: Sư phạm khoa Anh văn
III.KINH NGHIỆM KHOA HỌC
- Lĩnh vực chuyên môn có kinh nghiệm: môn Tiếng Anh
- Số năm có kinh nghiệm: 12
- Các sáng kiến kinh nghiệm đã có trong 5 năm gần đây:


Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

INTRODUCTION

Nowadays English has become important and necessary to study. A lot of
Vietnamese people use it as a tool to communicate at work, on business and in many
fields. Many new methods have been applied to teach English. Although it is a
compulsory subject most of the students don’t study well. One of the main causes is
their incomplete awareness of the purpose of learning English.Many teachers have been
teaching words in isolation with synonyms, antonyms or word family and give
Vietnamese equivalents without providing students with any other contexts. Vocabulary
is essential element in conveying information is taught and learned cursorily. In order
to master a language we have to understand and speak it fluently, but we don’t know

how to use new words. Therefore, motivating students to learn English is necessary I
think there are a lot of wayso vocabulary as. Teaching vocabulary is one of the ways to
help them learn better. However, there are a lot of ways to teach vocabulary such as:
root; prefix and suffix; synonyms and antonyms; phrasal verbs; collocation; pictures,
flashcards, objects...etc. In my opinion, teaching vocabulary collocation is one of the
important ways to help stusents to study well because the students tend to learn
vocabulary with word by word and understand the meaning of each word. They don’t
know that it is impossible to read a text as a whole in this way. As a result, they often
have trouble in reading. For this reason, I would like introduce teaching vocabulary
collocation to my students.

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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

CONTENT
What is collocation?
Collocations are combinations of words which are used together. If we want to use a
word naturally, we need to learn the other words that often go with it. This can be
different from language to language. For example, in English we say:
I missed the bus.(= I didn’t catch the bus) ( NOT I lost the bus)
He had to go to hospital; it’s a serious injury. (= a bad injury) ( NOT a grave injury)
There are a few ways collocations are used in.

Verb + Noun
The meaning of many of these examples may be clear, but did you know these verbs
and nouns go together? Are they the same or different in your language?

start

a car

(= turn on the engine)

a family (= think about having a first child)
tell

a story
a joke (= a funny story)

miss

a person (= be happy because a particular person is not there)
a lesson (= not go to a lesson)

get on a bus (opp get off a bus)
waste time / money (= use it badly)

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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Adjective + Noun
a soft


drink (= non-alcoholic drink)
voice ( opp a loud voice)
wine (opp sweet wine)

dry

weather (opp wet weather)
rain (= raining a lot)

heavy

traffic (= a lot of cars on the road)
smoker (= a person who smokes a lot)

a great

success (= very successful)
time ( = an enjoyable time)

hard work (= difficult physically or mentally)
a hard question ( = difficult to answer)
Examples:
The conference hard work but every said it was a great success.
Threre was heavy traffic in the city center because of the wet weather.
We had a great time in Brazil – the beaches are fantastic.
Adverb + Adjective
The underlined adverbs in 1-3 mean “very”, the adverbs in 4-5 mean “fully/
completely”. In each case, we often use these adverbs with the adjectives that follow
them. Notice also the phrases in bold.
1. I’m terribly sorry to bother you. (= to disturb you), but is Steven there?

2. She is well aware of the problem. (= she knows all about the problem)
3. It is vitally important to make a note of common collocations in your notebook.

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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

4. He’s fast asleep. (= in a deep sleep)
She was wide awake (= fully awake) a minute ago.

Noun + Noun
package holiday
Verb + Adjective + Noun
have a great time
Verb + Adverb
discuss calmly
Verb + Preposition + Noun
hand in an assignment
How can I help my students with collocations?
I argue that students at every level need to be aware of the importance of
collocation. I believe that collocation can be used not only to help learners understand
and manage lexis but also to communicate ideas more effectively.
For example, there is the difference in meaning between “glance” and “glimpse”.
After some contexts in which these words might be used, we produced the following :
glance

She glanced at her

watch.

Glimpse

I only had time to
glance
at
the
newspapers.

He had glimlsed her
through the window
as he passed.
I glimpsed a car as
it drove past

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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

It was clear to me how helpful it was to use collocation to highlight the differences
between the two verbs. I have also found collocation useful in explaining the difference
between opposites:
light green / dark green
light suitcase / heavy suitcase
You can give you alternative ways of saying something, which may be more colourful
or more precise. For example, instead of repeating it was very cold and very dark, we

can say it was bitterly cold and pitch dark.Collocations can improve your style in
writing: instead of saying poverty causes crime, you can say poverty breeds crime;
instead of saying big meal you can say a substantial meal.
H.Long and C.Richards (2001) mentioned that another advantage of learning
collocations is to help the learners express themselves more fluently than learning
individual words. When learners memorize vocabulary as chunks instead of isolated
words, they can produce language faster and more fluently because they don’t need to
think about the individual words but they can produce the chunks as an item. For
example, learners will speak “ Please close the window”; “ Can I have the bill, please?”;
“ Pleased to meet you.” faster and more fluently when learn the whole chunk than
learning the individual words as close, window, please.
Lewis (2000) states that knowing a word includes knowing its collocations. It
means that, in any collocations, one word will “call up” another word in the mind of the
native speakers. In other words, the learners can predict the other word when they hear
one word with the various degrees of success. That helps the learners understand more
deeply what the native speakers spoke and be more understood by the native speakers.
Types of Collocation
1. De-lexicalised Verbs
De-lexicalised verbs (get, have, make, do, put, take) are important when teaching
collocation although they may have a basic meaning (make = create/manufacture,
have = own/possess), they are more commonly used in combinations with nouns or
other words as a chunk of meaning:
Examples:
make a mistake
do your homework
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc


Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

take an exam
In my experience, a lot of mistakes in collocations are made with de-lexicalised verbs,
probably due to leanrer language interference .
2. Nouns

I think that it is very useful to teach learners these collocations with a noun as a
key word because the majority of general nouns usually require further
qualification:
Examples:
Good / well-paid / menial / boring / full-time job
Package / luxury / expensive / cheap / good
Nouns are also important because they are usually the words that carry the most
meaning within a sentence.
Strong/ Weak and Frequent/ Infrequent Collocations
There is also a difference between strong/weak and frequent/infrequent collocations. A
collocation that is frequent (e.g. a warm day) is not necessarily strong, as either word in
the partnership suggests a number of other collocates:
sweater

Bad

blanket

wedding

(a)
smile
warm


(a)

Sunny

hug

Rainy

breeze

glorious

day

In the same way, a particularly strong collocation may be used very infrequently (e.g.
bat your eyelashes). The most useful combination for teaching purposes, then, seems to
be a combination of strong (but not completely fixed) and frequent.
A strong/infrequent collocation may be worth mentioning to draw the learners’
attention to its existence, but little, if any, class time would need to be spent on
collocations at the weak/infrequent end of the spectrum.
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Nation also makes the point that, in a classroom situation, frequent collocations only
deserve attention if: “their frequency is equal to or higher than other high-frequency

words.” This puts a greater pressure on the teacher when making the decision about
whether to spend time on a particular collocation. I feel that if there are enough
potential frequent collocations of one of the nodes, it is worth spending some class time
on:
take a
put (yourself) at run the

Risk

With the second two verbs in this example, the unpredictability of the combination is
also a factor. Most learners at intermediate level or above would be familiar with all
three of the verbs, but few would realise that it is possible to collocate ‘run’ and ‘risk’.
Moreover, this would be a difficult collocation for learners to work out just by knowing
the meaning of the individual parts, so would therefore merit some class time.
What problems do learners have with collocation, and how can we help?
1.Quantity/Arbitrariness
A major stumbling block to most learners is the fact that there are so many possible
collocations and that the choice of which word to collocate with, say, a noun is
completely arbitrary. This leads to the question: “Well, why is it have a coffee not drink
a coffee?” and the inevitable reply (hated by teachers and students alike): “It just is.”
If students are encouraged to record collocations as they occur, they have a
permanent record of which combinations are possible. Class time can be given for
learners to revise and practise the collocations they have learnt (see below for
suggestions) or to add new ones.
There are various ways for learners to record new collocations in their vocabulary
notebooks. I have found that the most effective is to use a box format such as:
(verb)

(adjective)


(verb)

(adjective)

(verb)

(adjective)

noun

For lower level learners it might be helpful to organise their collocation boxes by
topic (in the same order as their coursebooks) – jobs, family, food etc. Intermediate
learners may prefer to organise by keyword – work, holiday etc – and advanced
students by grammatical structure – verb + noun; noun + adjective etc. Organisation is
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

really a matter for individual learners, though, as it should be done according to
personal preference to minimise the learning burden. Learners can leave some entries
in the boxes blank to be completed at a later date with other collocations that they have
noticed independently.

2.Learner Language Transfer
Many learners expect that because they collocate something a particular way in L1, it
will translate directly (and correctly) into English. A quick survey of my current
learners produced the following verb + noun collocations:

English
take the car
have a coffee

L1 Equivalent
Đón xe (Vietnamese)

Literal Translation
Car went

Uống cafe (Vietnamese)

Go by car
Take a coffee
Drink a coffee

do your homework Làm bài tập (Vietnamese) Write your homework
pay attention to

Chú ý (Vietnamese)

Be attentive
Give attention to

go on holiday

Đi nghỉ hè (Vietnamese)

Do attention to
Holiday doing

Do holiday
Leave on holiday

I think that because of this untranslatable teachers should focus on collocations which
can not be translated directly, pointing out contrasts to students instead of similarities.
If learners fail to use a correct collocation, even if their utterance is grammatically
and contextually correct, their English will still sound unnatural and ‘foreign’, to the
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

extent that their addressee may not understand them at all. Compare the following (from
a selection of my learners’ written work):
He survived very strongly.
We own a shopping centre.
I took a good decision.
He knows what he’s speaking about.
I can’t see any problem why.
If we substitute the asterisked words for miraculously, have, made, talking and
reason, these utterances become more natural and nativelike.
Collocation grids can be useful in helping learners to understand which words are
possible collocates and which aren’t, by simply ticking the correct combination.
These grids can be made from the students’ own written (or spoken) work as a
correction exercise as well as more general ones in textbooks:
a person

a bank


money a car

a shop

a wallet

rob
steal
Such grids are also very useful for showing the difference in meaning or use between
two or three words that appear almost the same. The grid may then be used to contrast
with the learner language possibilities for collocation.
3.Meaning and Noticing
Especially when dealing with text, many learners (especially those at lower levels)
tend to focus on individual words that they don’t know, rather than on the collocation.
This is because the usual way of noticing and recording vocabulary is to write the word
(out of context and without its collocates) in a vocabulary notebook with it’s the learner
language translation. Alternatively, more advanced learners will say, “I know that
word” and move on without checking for any collocates in the text. Both of these
problems arise from poor learner-training: learners need to have collocations pointed
out to them before they can be expected to notice them for themselves.
When working with text, it takes very little time to point collocations out to learners
– or, alternatively, with higher levels or classes experienced in noticing to ask them to
find collocations for themselves. In this opening paragraph , six collocations can be
identified (my underlining):
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc


Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

When Clifford met Annie, they found one thing in common. They both love lists.
So together they have written the ultimate list, a list of rules for their marriage.
Teprenuptial agreement itemizes every detail of their lives together, from shopping to
sex. Timothy Laurence met them in Florida in the apartment they share.
Newspaper articles, opening paragraphs of books and videos of TV soap operas or
sports commentaries also lend themselves to this kind of noticing activity. The
advantages of using such authentic material are obvious – the language is used in a
natural way and in context. However, we should be careful to choose which
collocations we focus on in terms of frequency , level and suitability for our particular
group of learners.

Phonology (Chunking and Linking)
A direct result of this inability to recognise collocation is that many learners
(especially at lower levels) sound very stilted when speaking. There are three main
reasons for this:
1.They pronounce every word with equal stress
2.They fail to notice how the sentence could be chunked
3. They don’t link the chunks together
Without a knowledge of collocation, learners are unable to chunk, link and stress
longer sentences correctly, making them sound unnatural.
Even with advanced classes, choral drilling is the best way to give students extra
time to work on this aspect of collocation. A demonstration on the board of where the
linking and stress occurs (plus any schwas) can help students who learn more visually.
Activities to help students with collocation
Once the collocations have been pointed out, several activities can be produced to
help the studennt become familiar with them.
Recycling activities:



Matching activities in which the collocations are divided and written on separate
cards:
These can be used as the initial part of a test-teach-test approach to see what the
learners already know, or to revise collocations from a previous lesson. This form
of recycling is a good way to help learners remember the collocations .
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Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Board races where the teacher calls out one half of the collocation and the
students work in teams to write the other half on the board. This activity can be
extended by asking students to suggest other possible collocates.
Cloze activities such as a gapped transcription of a listening text, or sentences in
which half the collocation has been deleted.

Communicative activities:
I have used surveys, reports and stories with different levels of learners to practise
previously-learnt collocations in context more communicatively.
With collocations organised by topic, learners can conduct a survey among their
classmates and follow it up with a written or oral report. In the topic of household
chores, for examples, learners survey the following:
in your house, who:
does the dishes?

makes the beds?
takes the rubbish out? (etc)
With collocations organised by key-word , learners can be given a set of cards with
the collocations written on them which they have to put into some kind of chronological
order. They can then use the cards to write a story :
got worse

got angry got caught got drunk

got divorced got sick

got fat

got shot

got pregnant got into debt

got in trouble
got killed

I introduce you some collocations in English 10 (textbook) from Unit 1 to
Unit 16.

1.Verb + Noun
Unit 1: take a rest, have breakfast/ lunch, go home, watch TV, finish work, …..
Unit 2: study subjects, go to school, ride a bike, make talks, go dancing, pay
attention, read a book, …
Unit 3: earn a degree, take a degree,take possition, take turn, save money, award
prize, …
Unit 4: make an effort, raise arms, attend class, take photographs, …

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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Unit 5: pay bills, read newspapers/ magazines, receive letters, ….
Unit 6: make a trip, get permission, take photographs, make a tour, …
Unit 7: provide information/ entertainment, get information, leave home,…
Unit 8: produce crops, watch TV, do shopping, build a hotel, …
Unit 9: use devices/ fertilizers, provide information, harm the environment,
offer solutions, ….
Unit 10: play a part, cause flood/ erosion, save the earth, have better food,…
Unit 11: get a fine, catch a train, …..
Unit 12: express ideas/ thoughts/ feelings, save money, ….
Unit 13: watch TV, go dancing, see a play, …….
Unit 14: gain a victory, win the trophy/ the title, pass the exam, …
Unit 16: have illusions, make comparisions,…

2. Verb +Preposition + Noun
Unit 2: have a good time, …
Unit 6: go on an excursion, …
Unit 8: make of straw and mud, listen to the news/ radio, ….
Unit 9: divide into five different parts, fall into three major groups,….
Unit 12: listen to the radio, go to the cinema, listen to music,….
Unit 13: make in America, …..

3.Adjective + Noun
Unit 1: quick breakfast, long day, …

Unit 2: crowded streets, international languages, hard work, ….
Unit 3: mature student, general education, scientific training, private tutor, …
Unit 4: poor family, proper schooling, …
Unit 5: lightning speed, foreign language, …
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Unit 6: great event, hard work, …
Unit 8: bumper crop, modern technology, …..
Unit 9: modern technology, marine life, plastic bags, ….
Unit 10: endangered species, natural environment, constant supply , …
Unit 11: national parks, tropical zone, ….
Unit 12: integral part, important events, ….
Unit 13: early days, ….
Unit 14: governing body, final match, ….
Unit 15: global finance, …
Unit 16: national pride, important meeting, …

4.Noun + Noun
Unit 1: morning tea, ….
Unit 3: birthday party, phone number, ……
Unit 4: teaching job, …
Unit 6: rock formation, ….
Unit 7: TV programmes, TV series, information technology, ,…
Unit 9: water temperature, cigarette butts, …
Unit 10: heart disease, forest fire, ……

Unit 13: film maker, …
Unit 14: world championship, host nation, ….
Unit 15: apartment building, art galleries/ museums,…
Unit 16: meeting hall, visiting hours, …
Findings and discussion about the results of the Pre-test and Post-test
To check the effectiveness and benefits of teaching and learning collocations, the
writer designed a pre-test and a post-test for students. The students were given the test
in the first week and the last week of the research. The purpose of pre-test and post-test
is to check the students’ word usage accuracy.
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Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Pre-test and Post-test
Filling the blanks with the mosst appropriate word to complete the collocations.
1. When she’s cold, she really loves to drink ……………. tea.
a.hard

b.strong

c.heavy

d.tough

2. Why don’t we go ………………… the movies tonight?
a.into


b.to

c.around

d.on

3. He is interested in ……………….. a kite every afternoon.
a.playing

b.flying

c.taking

d.having

4. I would ………….. recommend that you learn a foreign language.
a.strongly

b.firmly

c.hardly

d.absolutely

5. ……………. rain has caused flooding in many areas.
a.Strong

b.Heavy

c.Long


d.Big

6. Jason has to ………………. a choice between his career ang his family.
a.do

b.make

c.take

d.get

7. Peter …………….an accidentlast night but he’s OK now.
a.took

b.had

c.got

d.stuck in

8. Mr Smith is observing a big ……………….. of fish on the radar screen.
a.school

b.flock

c.swarm
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d.pack



Vu Nguyen Minh Ngoc

Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

9. I am ………….. aware that there are serious problems.
a.fully

b.very

c.highly

d.completely

c.having

preparing

10.I hate ………………. the ironing.
a.making

b.doing

Discussion the results from pre-test and post-test of the students.
Pre-test of students
Class

Total


Upper

Average

Lower

10A10

44

5

24

15

10D4

42

8

22

12

Post-test of students
Class

Total


Upper

Average

Lower

10A10

44

11

23

10

10D4

42

14

20

8

The results of the Pre-test and Post-test of students.
First of all, the table brings about a negative impression on the results of the Pre-test.
However, significant improvement can be seen through the results of the Post-test. This

result indicates that after being aware of and learning collocations, a lot of students can
use vocabulary properly. It also helps confirm the writer’s hypothesis about the benefits
of teaching and learning collocations.

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Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

Conclusion
Vocabulary always plays an important role in learning English. Therefore, the
purpose of teaching vocabulary through collocations is to give the students to use as
much words as possible in the text as well as in communication. It helps learners use
vocabulary more accurately and naturally.I hope that this research will provide the
learners with English an effective way of learning vocabulary through collocations.
I would like to say that I am very grateful for their comments and criticism.

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Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

REFERENCES
H.Long, M& C.Richards,J. (2001).Learning vocabulary in Another Language.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
McCarthy,M& O’Dell, F(1997).Vocabulary in Use. Cambridge: Cambridge University

Press.
Oxford Collocations: dictionary for students of English (2002). Oxford:Oxford
University Press.
Cambridge Advanced learner’s dictionary. Third Eddition.
Lewis, M (2000). Teaching collocation: Further development in the lexical approach.
Oxford: Oxford University Press.
McCarthy, M & O’Dell, F (2008). English Collocations in Use, Advanced: How Words
Work Together for Fluent and Natural English. Cambridge University Press.
McCarten, J. (2007). Teaching vocabulary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
English 10 Textbook

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Teaching Vocabulary through Collocations

19


SỞ GD&ĐT ĐỒNG NAI
Đơn vị .....................................

CỘNG HOÀ XÃ HỘI CHỦ NGHĨA VIỆT NAM
Độc lập - Tự do - Hạnh phúc
................................, ngày

tháng


năm

PHIẾU NHẬN XÉT, ĐÁNH GIÁ SÁNG KIẾN KINH NGHIỆM
Năm học: .....................................
–––––––––––––––––

Tên sáng kiến kinh nghiệm: ......................................................................................................
.......................................................................................................................................................

Họ và tên tác giả: .................................................... ………Đơn vị (Tổ):....................................
Lĩnh vực:
Quản lý giáo dục



Phương pháp dạy học bộ môn: ........................... 

Phương pháp giáo dục



Lĩnh vực khác: .................................................... 

1. Tính mới
- Có giải pháp hoàn toàn mới



- Có giải pháp cải tiến, đổi mới từ giải pháp đã có




2. Hiệu quả
- Hoàn toàn mới và đã triển khai áp dụng trong toàn ngành có hiệu quả cao 
- Có tính cải tiến hoặc đổi mới từ những giải pháp đã có và đã triển khai áp dụng
trong toàn ngành có hiệu quả cao 
- Hoàn toàn mới và đã triển khai áp dụng tại đơn vị có hiệu quả cao 
- Có tính cải tiến hoặc đổi mới từ những giải pháp đã có và đã triển khai áp dụng
tại đơn vị có hiệu quả 
3. Khả năng áp dụng
- Cung cấp được các luận cứ khoa học cho việc hoạch định đường lối, chính sách:
Tốt 
Khá 
Đạt 
- Đưa ra các giải pháp khuyến nghị có khả năng ứng dụng thực tiễn, dễ thực hiện
và dễ đi vào cuộc sống:
Tốt 
Khá 
Đạt 
- Đã được áp dụng trong thực tế đạt hiệu quả hoặc có khả năng áp dụng đạt hiệu
quả trong phạm vi rộng: Tốt 
Khá 
Đạt 
XÁC NHẬN CỦA TỔ CHUYÊN MÔN
(Ký tên và ghi rõ họ tên)

THỦ TRƯỞNG ĐƠN VỊ
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