Title: Phonics, Word Recognition, and Spelling
1Phonics, Word Recognition, and Spelling
- Sharon Walpole
- University of Delaware
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3Overview of the Session
- Look at development of the alphabetic principle
in a childs natural writing - Discuss stages in reading and spelling
development - Review principles of, strategies for, and
research on phonics instruction - Look at reflection of the alphabetic principle in
a childs developmental spelling assessments - Review some basic concepts about the spelling
system that are helpful for teachers to know - Consider strategies for developing teacher
knowledge in this area
4- Childrens spellings can give us insight into
their knowledge of the characteristics of an
alphabetic orthography. - From spellings, we can document what children
know, what they can do, and what they need to
learn.
5 6What does the child
7What does the child
8- HTUT SAT NO DWO
- WOW
- Humpty Dumpty sat on a wall
- (and I made the O into a pumpkin!)
9What does the child
10What does the child
11- Fin you dot limi wrking
- you ovwas s locat the
- mes you mad
- Fine. You dont like my working. You always
say look at the mess you made.
12What does the child
13What does the child
14- I like gowin g to the moves with my mom
15What does the child
16What does the child
17- WONS A BOY NAMDE DAVY FIDID INDEIDS HE HAD A GON
AND A NIF HE WOS the KING of the WIYD FROTTER TER
18What does the child
19What does the child
20- I like horsis
- The beste
- I like anomols.
21What does the child
22What does the child
23- I like to ski on the hill.
- I like green eggs and ham.
24What does the child
25What does the child
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27- Onc my brother had a dream. We had a krab. We
boet the krab that day. That same knite the krab
crold on my brothers head and he dreamd abuot
that crab. He wock up and said I dremd abuot a
krab.
28What does the child
29What does the child
30- Today at library we talkt about Sinthiea
Riyhlent. She had a real dog naemd mudge. And
she rote abuot Henry and mudge. A subetot came in
and read us a henry and mudge book.
31What does the child
32What does the child
33- My uncel came on Saterday. He was the kcick me
chaimpieon. He juggled 585 times in a row. He was
the best in the word back then. He realy was!!!!
34What does the child
35What does the child
36- The watercress seeds are poiting towerd the
window because it needs sun. We are going to be
able to eat them at the end of school.
37What does the child
38General Questions
- Do you have adequate understanding of
developmental issues in reading and spelling? - Do you have adequate understanding of the role of
decoding in word recognition and spelling? - Does your reading program include adequate
attention to instruction in phonics and decoding? - Does your reading program include a sensible plan
for assessment of phonics knowledge and decoding
skills? - Does your reading program include adequate
attention to intervention in decoding?
39General Plan
- Who needs phonics instruction? When?
- A look at literacy ages and stages
- Instructional strategies for teaching phonics
- Research on phonics instruction
- Building a knowledge base for teaching phonics
40Development of Reading
- Emergent Stage Before children have a concept of
word - Beginning Stage As children are building a sight
vocabulary - Instructional Stage Continues through
years--advances with instruction - Transitional reader Begin to read silently and
read/write with greater fluency - Intermediate and Advanced Read to learn and
write to convey meaning
41Stages in Beginning Reading
- Ehri (1997)
- Pre-alphabetic
- Uses environmental and visual cues
- Partial alphabetic
- Reads words by forming connections between only
some of the letters - Full alphabetic
- Reads words by forming complete connections
because child can segment to the phoneme - Consolidated alphabetic
- Reads words by chunking (morphemes, syllables,
etc.) - Ehri, L. (1997). Sight word learning in normal
readers and dyslexics. In B. Blachman (Ed.),
Foundations of reading acquisition and dyslexia
Implications for early intervention (pp.
163-189). Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
42Stages in Beginning Spelling
- Gentry (1982)
- Precommunicative
- Pictures or Letters, but random
- Semiphonetic
- Abbreviated spellings, some sounds
represented - Phonetic
- All sounds represented
- Transitional
- Long vowels marked, but not always correctly
- Conventional Spelling
- Mostly correct spellings
- Gentry, J.R. (1982). An analysis of spelling
development in GYNS AT WRK. The Reading Teacher,
36, 192-200.
43Reading and Spelling Development
44How does developmental data inform instruction?
- Core instruction mirrors developmental sequence
- Assessments identify developmental status
- Needs-based and intervention programs accelerate
development for struggling readers
45What does this development really look like?
- Take a few minutes to put some developmental
milestones for kindergarten and first grade in
order based on your knowledge of beginning
reading. - Notice the relationships between alphabet
knowledge, phonemic awareness, reading, and
spelling.
46Principles of Good Phonics Instruction
- Good phonics instruction should develop the
alphabetic principle. - Good phonics instruction should develop
phonological awareness. - Good phonics instruction should provide a
thorough grounding in the letters. - Good phonics instruction should not teach rules,
need not use worksheets, should not dominate
instruction, and does not have to be boring.
47- Good phonics instruction provides sufficient
practice in reading words, both in isolation and
in stories, and in writing words, both from
dictation and using invented spelling. - Good phonics instruction leads to automatic word
recognition. - Good phonics instruction is one part of a reading
program.
48- To what extent does the phonics instruction in
your setting honor these principles? What
strategies might you use to improve it?
49- Take time to identify the most common
instructional approaches to teaching phonics. - To what extent are these approaches reflected in
your phonics curriculum, either singly or in
combination?
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52What does SBRR say about phonics instruction?
Goes in a preset, logical order.
- No matter what
- the type or types,
- it has to be systematic
- and explicit
The teacher and the child are clear about the
element under study.
53National Reading Panel Report
- General question
- What do we know about phonics instruction with
sufficient confidence to recommend for classroom
use?
54Method
55Sources
- 38 studies
- Some type of phonics instruction compared with
unsystematic or non-phonics instruction - School-based rather than laboratory-based
curricula - Measure of reading
- Not used in the PA meta-analysis
56Coding Variables
57Findings
- Systematic phonics instruction had a significant
effect on childrens reading achievement compared
to controls. - Synthetic, larger-unit (onset-rime), and other
phonics programs all were more effective than
controls, but no one type of instruction or
instructional program was significantly more
effective.
58- Tutoring, small groups, and whole classes are all
effective delivery systems for phonics
instruction. - Phonics instruction is more effective when it
occurs in kindergarten and first grade than
later. - Phonics instruction is effective for at-risk
kindergarteners, at-risk first graders, and
disabled students. The findings for older weak
readers are confusing.
59- Phonics instruction improves students ability to
read real words, pseudowords, and irregular words
(to a lesser extent). - Phonics instruction improves reading
comprehension in kindergarteners, first graders,
and disabled readers, but not necessarily in
older readers. - Phonics instruction improves spelling in
kindergarten and first grade, but not for older
readers.
60- Phonics instruction is effective for children at
different levels of SES. - Phonics instruction was more effective than all
forms of control groups (basal, whole language,
whole word, regular curriculum).
61And heres what they said they didnt know . . .
- How long should phonics instruction be? Years?
Minutes? - How many letter-sound relationships should be
taught? - How can we maintain consistency in instruction
and interest and motivation of teachers? - What is the role of teacher knowledge?
- How should teachers be trained to teach phonics?
62- Given the new core programs you are using, to
what extent are these questions answered for you?
Are they answered in a satisfactory way? What
are the big issues in the schools right now?
63What are some ways we can go wrong?
- Rely solely on teachable moments
- Invent phonics curriculum as we go
- Pace inappropriately
- Ignore developmental data
- Forget to provide practice of phonics taught in
real reading and spelling - Teach phonics all day long
- Forget to collect data on childrens learning
64How do we measure phonics knowledge in K and 1?
- Nonsense word reading (mep)
- Real word reading in isolation (map)
- Spelling tasks, both controlled and natural
- Reading tasks -- but not until later
- Why are each of these tasks useful? To what
extent are they part of the assessment plan in
your setting?
65- Watch a child acquire the alphabetic principle
during kindergarten. The snapshots come from
assessments rather than from natural writing.
Think about what he knows about letters and
sounds and his growing phonemic awareness.
66Christopher
- Entering kindergarten (8/04)
- No preschool
- Name 0 letters
- 0 letter sounds
- But a great teacher!
67Christopher Mid October
- 9 letter names
- 0 letter sounds
- Rudimentary spelling
-
fan
pet
rug
sit
mop
68Christopher Mid January
- 23 letter names
- 17 letter sounds
- Much better spelling!
- tap for top gad for glad
- lid pan for plan
- wag sap for step
- bit for bet ran for run
- nit for hot hip for ship
- vat for that mad for mud
- hip for chop fad for fed
- dig for dog
69Christophers journal writing
70Christophers writing-March 10
71Christopher Mid April
- paf for path
- kap for camp
- lap
- jrip for drop
- top
- pop for rip
- kot for cut
- ship for shop
- shin for chin
- van
- wat for wet
- nast for nest
- gad for glad
- hot
- dig
- rish for rich
- tab for tub
- hot for hunt
- tis for this
- yes
- sot for trot
- not for stop
- fish
- kib for crib
- job
72- Interpret Christophers spellings. What
orthographic features does he know and use? What
is he struggling with?
73- To what extent are the kindergarten and first
grade teachers maximizing childrens use of
phonics knowledge to engage in spelling and
writing? - What are the benefits of such an approach for
teachers and for children?
74Universals of Language Study
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76- What is the role of knowledge in expert
instruction? To what extent does teacher
knowledge interact with curriculum? Why develop
teacher knowledge if we have well designed
curriculum materials? - Examples which follow draw from Chapter 5 of
Moats, Speech to Print
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87- Lets look at the first hundred words that
children use in their writing, and sort them into
categories. Given what weve reviewed here about
phonemes, graphemes, and syllables, which are
regular and which are irregular?
88- Carefully consider the outline on pages 106 and
107. To what extent does the decoding and
spelling instruction in the core programs with
which you have been working mirror this
developmental sequence? What are some issues
that you would like to discuss?
89- Now look at the spellings of four different
children in the same kindergarten classroom.
What is the role of teacher knowledge in
promoting literacy success for these children?
How can we develop that knowledge?
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94Some strategies for building knowledge
- Analyze the scope and sequence for teaching
decoding and spelling in your core program and in
your intervention program. - Locate and use the phonics and spelling
assessments included in your core. - Use a developmental spelling assessment to learn
more about your children.
95Some teacher-friendly resources
- Bear, D.R., Invernizzi, M., Templeton, S.,
Johnston, F. (2004). Words their way Word study
for phonics, vocabulary, and spelling
instruction. Upper Saddle River, NJ Pearson. - Fox, Barbara J. (2004). Word identification
strategies Phonics from a new perspective.
Upper Saddle River, NJ Pearson. - Ganske, K. (2000). Word journeys
Assessment-guided phonics, spelling, and
vocabulary instruction. New York Guilford. - Lyon, A., Moore, P. (2003). Sound systems
Explicit, systematic phonics in early literacy
contexts. Portland, ME Stenhouse. - Savage, J.F. (2004). Sound it out Phonics in a
comprehensive reading program. Boston, MA
McGraw Hill. - Strickland, D.S. (1998). Teaching phonics today
A primer for educators. Newark, DE
International Reading Association. - CIERA series Every child a reader
- http//www.ciera.org/library/products/ecr/index.ht
ml - PALS website
- http//pals.virginia.edu/Instructional-Resources/
96References from this talk
- Ehri, L. (1997). Sight word learning in normal
readers and dyslexics. In B. Blachman (Ed.),
Foundations of reading acquisition and dyslexia
Implications for early intervention (pp.
163-189). Mahwah, NJ Lawrence Erlbaum
Associates. - Gentry, J.R. (1982). An analysis of spelling
development in GYNS AT WRK. The Reading Teacher,
36, 192-200. - Moats, L. C. (2000). Speech to print Language
essentials for teachers. Baltimore, MD
Brookes. - National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development. (2000). Report of the National
Reading Panel. Teaching children to read an
evidence-based assessment of the scientific
research literature on reading and its
implications for reading instruction Reports of
the subgroups (NIH Publication No. 00-4754).
Washington, DC U.S. Government Printing Office. - Stahl, S.A., Duffy-Hester, A.M., Stahl, K.A.D.
(1998). Everything you wanted to know about
phonics (but were afraid to ask). Reading
Research Quarterly, 33, 338-355.