Title: Word Recognition: Phonics, Word Families
1Word RecognitionPhonics, Word Families
- SPC ED 587
- October 18, 2006
2Literature Review Assignment
- Select at least 2 empirical articles that examine
the efficacy of the instructional approach you
have selected for your literacy project and
synthesize findings across articles. - Every effort must be made to find empirical
articles that examine the use of the selected
approach with individuals with intellectual or
severe disabilities. If you are not certain about
the applicability of an article, check with the
professor prior to completing the paper. - Literature reviews should be 7 12 pages in
length and should follow the guidelines provided
by the professor. To receive full points,
students must attach copies of each article
included in the review when the paper is
submitted.
3- Grading Checklist for Literature Review
- Reviewed at least 2 empirical articles examining
a single reading instruction approach/method for
individuals with mental retardation/severe
disabilities. Attached copies of each article
/3 pts - Described rationale/participants/procedures/findin
gs/ recommendations across articles.
/15 points - Rationale (Why did you choose to examine this
approach?) - Participants (Who were individuals in the
studies reviewed with whom the approach was
used?) - General Methods/Procedures (How was the
approach implemented in these studies and how
were reading/literacy skills assessed to
determine the effectiveness of the approach? - Findings or Results (What were the results of
using this approach?) - Implications (What can we learn from these
research findings that will help us provide more
effective instruction for our students with
MR/severe disabilities?) - Paper followed format guidelines provided in
class 7-12 pages in length double-spaced and
typed followed basic APA guidelines included a
cover page, headers, page numbers, headings, and
a reference page. Sources cited using APA
guidelines.
/2 pts - TOTAL /20 points
4Phonics
- knowledge of letter-sound relationships
- reading instruction that teaches students to make
the connections between phonemes (sounds) and the
graphemes (letters)
5Phonics Instruction
- Analytic (implicit)
- Whole Part - Whole
- Synthetic (explicit)
- Part whole
- Patterns (word families)
6Sequencing Levels of Difficulty
- Begin instruction with sounds in the initial
position - cat, tan, map
- Then sounds in the final position
- cat, nap
- Then sounds in the medial position
- catnap,
7One Suggested Sequence of Instruction
- Letter Names/Phonemic Awareness
- Initial consonants
- Short vowels
- Easy long vowels
- Final consonants
- Initial-consonant clusters
- Long vowels fine e marker
- Long-vowel diagraphs and trigraphs
- Advanced consonant correspondences
- R-controlled correspondences
- Other Vowel correspondences
8Strategies for Word Analysis
- Find a pronounceable part (chunk)
- Is there any part of the word you can say?
- (Does not work with all words!)
- Analogy
- Say the part of the word you know. Then say the
part you dont know. - Context
- Say the word. Is it a real word? Does it make
sense? - Say blank for the word and read to the end of
the sentence. Ask What would make sense here?
9Word Analysis Prompts
Strategy When Used Prompt
Pronounceable word part Unknown word contains a part student can say am or amp in champ Can you say any part of that word?
Analogy Unknown word is like a word student knows Unknown word grain is like known word rain Is this word like any word that you know?
Sound by sound Student is unable to chunk word. Words out word sound by sound /s/-/p/-/e/-/l/ spell Can you say the first sound, the next sound, the next sounds?
Context Student is unable to use phonics clues What would make sense here? Read to the end of the sentence and see what word would fit.
Monitoring Student checks to see if the word he pronounced is a real word and fits the context of the selection. Is that a real word? Does that make sense? Does that sound right?
Affirmation Teacher wishes to reinforce the students correct use of a strategy. I like the way you used a part of the word that you knew to help you say the whole word.