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Title: C


1
CI 208Reading Language Arts in the
Elementary School
  • Children need to learn letters, sounds, words,
    sentences, books, and they need to learn to
    comprehend literally and inferentially.
  • Ellin Keene Susan Zimmerman
  • Mosaic of Thought (1997)

2
Today
  • Materials Review Jigsaw
  • Essential Components of Reading Instruction -
    Part II.
  • Writers Workshop Storyboards
  • Discussion of Observation Paper.
  • Homework.

3
CI 208 Quiz 2
  • 20 multiple choice questions on teaching Early
    Readers.
  • Best way to prepare Read text articles when
    assigned, attend class regularly.
  • Main Topics
  • Theory practice of emergent literacy
  • Theory practice of social learning
  • Cueing systems
  • Invented spelling
  • Shared Guided reading
  • Writing Workshop

4
Materials Review Jigsaw
  • All 1s are going to become experts on Basal
    Readers.
  • All 2s are going to become experts on Leveled
    Readers
  • All 3s are going to become experts on Text Sets.
  • All 4s are going to become experts on Controlled
    Vocabulary.
  • All 5s are going to become experts on Emergent
    Readers.

5
What is essential?
  • Phonemic Awareness
  • Alphabetic Principle
  • Phonics
  • Vocabulary
  • Fluency
  • Comprehension

6
Vocabulary
  • 2 types of vocabulary - oral print.
  • Easier to comprehend in oral form.
  • Literacy learners translate words from print into
    speech.

7
Is knowing words important?
  • The more children know about language ...the
    better equipped they are to succeed in reading.
  • --National Research Council, 1999

8
Promoting Oral Language
  • Provide a language-rich classroom.
  • Read aloud daily.
  • Provide experiential knowledge.
  • Model the use of rich vocabulary.
  • Elaborate upon words they already know.
  • Provide adequate response time.
  • Promote questions conversations.
  • Use open-ended questions.
  • Ask children to retell, describe, justify, etc.

9
Teaching About Words
  • Have a special time to focus on word study every
    day.
  • Notice practice high-frequency words.
  • Have a Word Wall.
  • Learn about word families and patterns of
    spelling.
  • Teach structural analysis of words based on root
    words affixes (morphemes basic units of
    meaning).
  • Model teach strategies for figuring out unknown
    words.

10
Sample Vocabulary Activity Exclusion
Brainstorming
  • Students use prior knowledge to anticipate new
    concepts.
  • In pairs or groups, students discuss various
    words the teacher has chosen to introduce a topic
    or a book.
  • Students decide which words will and will not be
    found in the selection.
  • Students explain their decisions.
  • Provides a blend of schema activation and
    vocabulary analysis, and both are directly linked
    to the new reading selection.

11
Fluency
  • Reading with speed, accuracy, appropriate
    expression.
  • Fluent reading sounds like talking.
  • Depends on easy recognition of words.
  • Solving problems on the run.
  • --Fountas Pinnell

12
Teaching Fluency
  • Dont just assume fluency will happen without
    practice.
  • Focus on fluency at all ages.
  • Model what good reading sounds like let
    children practice.

13
Activities for Teaching Fluency
  • Paired Reading
  • Choral Reading
  • Ditto (or Echo) Reading
  • Dramatic Expression

14
Sample Fluency Activity Readers Theatre
  • An effective - and enjoyable - way to teach and
    practice fluency.
  • Provides an authentic reason for repeated
    readings.
  • Begin by using scripts with parts marked.
  • With practice and guidance, students can learn to
    create RT scripts with any text, both fictional
    and informational.

15
Comprehension
  • Intentional thinking during which meaning is
    constructed through interactions between text and
    reader. (Harris Hodges, 1995).

16
Teaching Comprehension
  • Right from the start, teach that reading is
    thinking.
  • Teach students to monitor their own reading.
  • Teach strategies for constructing meaning.
  • Teach various text structures.

17
Comprehension Strategies
  • Making connections
  • Making predictions
  • Forming questions
  • Forming images
  • Summarizing
  • Making inferences

18
Sample Comprehension Activities
  • Predict-O-Gram
  • Story Maps

19
Storyboards
  • Questions?
  • Share your final draft/storyboard with your
    partner.
  • Give suggestions specific to illustrations.

20
Observation Paper
  • Due Date Day 2 of Week 8.
  • Write about the places you observed.
  • Answer each question completely for full credit.
  • Total 100 points.

21
1. What did you see?
  • I chose to do my observations at ___ School. As
    I walked through the double glass doors into the
    brightly-lit school, I noticed the halls lined
    with lockers, and the vibrant displays of student
    work on the hallway bulletin boards. . .
  • Hint This section is all description. Just tell
    what you see. No opinions -- yet.

22
2. Personal connections.
  • This reminded me of . . . I remember . . . I
    think . . . I wonder . . . I wish I could ask . .
    .
  • Hint Put yourself, your own voice, into the
    writing.

23
3. Connection to theory.
  • The teachers commented that the principal walks
    the halls and visits classrooms fairly often.
    The better the principal and teacher know and
    understand each other, the more their
    relationship benefits the learning community
    (Skolnick 159). This relationship helps the
    teachers know that there is support and good
    leadership throughout their school.
  • Hint Connect without (to course readings) and
    within (to what youve said previously). Explain
    the connection. Cite specific references to
    course readings. Include a bibliography.

24
4. Your conclusions.
  • I believe that students are motivated to read
    and write even more when they see their stories
    and book responses displayed in the hallways.
    This provides them with a source of pride about
    their growing literacy abilities . . .
  • Hint Combine what youve seen with theory to
    draw some conclusions about childrens literacy
    learning.

25
5. Implications for your future teaching.
  • In conclusion, as a future teacher, I feel the
    school is as much a part of the total learning
    atmosphere as the classroom. I plan to invite the
    principal and other adults into my classroom and
    I plan to display my students work in the halls
    of my school. . .
  • Hint Explain how you can use what youve learned
    in your own classroom. 

26
Observation Discussion
  • Find a partner to discuss observations.
  • Each person relates key ideas from field notes.
  • Group members help each other reflect according
    to questions.

27
Next week . . .
  • Multiple Sign Systems Day 1
  • Visual Literacy Workshop Day 2

28
Reminders Assignments
  • Quiz on Early Readers next week Day 1
  • Observation Paper Due in 2 weeks 2nd note
    discussion next week, Day 1.
  • Literature Log Spreadsheet Hardcopy due next week
    day 1.
  • 1st lesson plan coming up in 2 weeks work with
    your groups outside of class as needed to
    complete the lesson plan.
  • Next time
  • Short, Kauffman, and Kahn article in PKT.
  • Bring storyboard to class.
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