Title: Early Phonics Interventions
1Early Phonics Interventions
- Presented by
- Deborah Anders, Ph.D.
- Ardas Wachter-Grene, M.A.Ed.
- Mary Thalgott, Ph.D.
2Agenda
- Purpose for Phonics Instruction
- Relationship Between Early Phonics Intervention,
DIBELS and the Big 5 - Characteristics of Good Phonics Lessons
- Components of a Phonics Intervention Lesson
- Effective Phonics Activities
3Objectives
- Participants will be able to
- Identify the purpose of phonics instruction
- Explain the relationship between phonics, DIBELS
and the Big 5 - Identify the characteristics of a good phonics
lesson - Describe the components of a phonics lesson
- Learn effective early phonics activities
4Purpose for Phonics Instruction
- The purpose of phonics instruction is not that
children learn to sound out words. The purpose is
that they learn to recognize words, quickly and
automatically, so that they can turn their
attention to comprehension of text. - Steven Stahl, 1992
5Why Teach Phonics?
- Phonics helps all learners
- Good readers spell better with phonics
instruction - Struggling readers learn to read better and
faster with explicit, systematic phonics
instruction - National Reading Panel, 2000
- American Psychological Society, 2001
6Relationship between DIBELS, Phonics the Big 5
- The Big 5 of Early Literacy
- Phonemic Awareness
- Phonics
- Fluency
- Vocabulary
- Comprehension
- DIBELS measures the Big 5
- Nonsense Word Fluency is the DIBELS measure of
phonics.
7(No Transcript)
8NWF assesses a students phonics ability in these
beginning 1st grade areas
- Recalling consonant sounds
- Recalling short vowel sounds
- Applying knowledge of the cvc and vc patterns to
decode - Blending (recoding) phonemes into words.
9NOTE
- If a students NWF score is in the at-risk
category, then PSF should be checked using
progress monitoring materials. - If a student is at-risk in both NWF and PSF, then
instruction in phonological awareness should be
provided.
10DIBELS Stair steps
3rd Grade Reading level -110 WCM
2nd Grade Fluency Reading Level - 90 WCM
1st Grade Fluency Reading Level - 40 WCM
Phonics
Letter Naming
Phonemic Awareness
11Characteristics of Good Phonics Lessons
- General characteristics of effective instruction
- Active students engaged
- Social interactive
- Reflective students making sense of what they
learned
12Specific Characteristics of Good Phonics Lessons
- Differentiated
- Systematic
- Sequential
- Cumulative
- Explicit
- Applied to text
- Active vocal response
- At your table, discuss each of these terms.
13Definitions
- Differentiated varying the emphasis of
instruction according to the needs of the
students - Systematic methodical, orderly, regular,
organized, efficient, logical - Sequential -
- Pre planned skill sequence
- Progresses from easier to more difficult
14Letter Sound Introduction OrderLouisa Moats, 2005
15Definitions cont.
- Cumulative builds on previous lessons and
experiences - Explicit
- Teacher explains and models
- Guided practice
- Corrective feedback
- Extended practice on skills as needed by
individuals - Check for understanding
- I do, we do, you do
16Modeling Cycle has 3 steps
- I Do Teacher models
- We Do Teacher and students practice
together - You Do Practice alone with teacher feedback
- THEN independent practice
- Susan Hall, 2006
17Definitions cont.
- Applied to text - students practice reading the
skill taught in isolated words, word lists and
decodable books - Active vocal response - students talk and
interact with the instructor the lesson is not
quietly completing worksheets alone
18Systematic/Explicit vs Implicit Phonics
- The systematic approach to phonics provides
teachers with lessons that teach a set of phonic
elements in a particular order. This order is
generally based on linguistic factors related to
which sounds are easiest for students to produce
at an early age. - With incidental (implicit) phonics instruction,
the teacher does not follow a preplanned sequence
of lessons to teach sound/spellings, but makes
decisions as to what phonic elements to teach
based on the opportunities the text presents
19Systematic/Explicit or Implicit?Example 1
- Read the big book Minnie Monkey. Ask students to
listen for a sound they hear many times in this
book (/m/). Ask individual students to show where
in the book they see words that contain the sound
/m/. Give students sentence strips to order and
retell the story. Ask students to think of other
/m/ words. Have them draw pictures for each word
in their journals and write a sentence that
contains one of the words. - Reading First Professional Development for
Harcourt Trophies, 2005
20Systematic/Explicit or Implicit?Example 2
- Display the large ice cream sound/spelling card.
Ask a student to name the picture that is on the
card. Write the words ice cream on the board, and
ask a volunteer to underline i in the word ice.
Ask students what sound the i makes in ice cream.
Have children chant /ie/ /ie/ /ie/ /ie/ as you
point to the letter. - As you display and name each picture card, have
children repeat the word and listen for the long
i sound bike, dime, five, kite, nine, prize,
slide, vine. - Reading First Professional Development for
Harcourt Trophies, 2005
21Systematic/Explicit or Implicit?Example 3
- Engage is a fast-paced, whole group response PA
activity using the /m/ sound. Display the large
mitten sound/spelling card. Have children name
the picture with you. Point to the m and say that
the spelling m makes the /m/ sound. Say that /m/
at the beginning of monkey is spelled with an m.
Have children chant /m/ as you point to m. - Ask students to write an m in the air as you
remind them that m is a spelling for /m/. Read a
list of words and have students use thumbs up
when they hear /m/ at the beginning of a word.
Then blend 15-20 words on the board using
sound-by-sound blending, most of which use the
/m/ m sound/spelling. Then pass out Matts Map
and engage in whole class reading of the
decodable book. - Reading First Professional Development for
Harcourt Trophies, 2005
22National Reading PanelReport, 2000
- A meta-analysis revealed that systematic
instruction in phonics produces significant
benefits for students in kindergarten through 6th
grade for children learning to read. - Reading First Professional Development for
Harcourt Trophies, 2005
23Components of a Phonics Intervention Lesson
24Three ways to teach blending for decoding
- Additive
- Whole Word
- Stretch and Say
25Additive Blending - ant
- Teacher
- My turn. Write a and say /a/.
- Write n and say /n/.
- Slide fingers under an and say /an/.
- Write t and say /t/.
- Slide fingers under ant and say /ant/.
- This word is ant. Use it in a sentence.
- Your turn. Use tapping signal to guide
students through steps.
26Whole Word Blending - Kip
- Teacher
-
- My turn. Tap under the letter K and say /k/.
-
- Tap under the letter i and say /i/.
- Tap under the letter p and say /p/.
-
- Run fingers under Kip and say /Kip/.
- Your turn. Tap under each letter. Students
say each sound and then the word.
27Stretch and Say
- Display the word tap
- Teacher says the whole word /tap/.
- Ask students to hold up one finger for each sound
they hear My turn, /t/ /a/ /p/. - Teacher says the whole word while sweeping hand
from left to right My turn, /tap/. - Teacher says, Your turn and guides students
through steps.
28Consonant and Vowel Phoneme Articulation
- Use handouts with videos to complete this
activity - Adapted from Louisa Moats
29- Activities for Early Phonics Interventions
301 Consonants and Vowels
- Objective
- Identify consonants and vowels
- Student Materials
- Alphabet arc Alphabet plastic letters
- Letter tiles
- Letter cards
- Description
- Teacher demonstrates position of the mouth which
helps students distinguish between vowels (open
mouth) and consonants (closed or blocked mouth).
312 Letter Sounds
- Objective
- Learn 5 consonant sounds and one short vowel
sound - Materials
- Letter sound cards
- Description
- Teacher models letter name, sound, and target
word. Students repeat. - a - /a/ - apple
- I do, we do, you do.
323 Word Building (initial sound)
- Objective
- Blend cvc patterns using known sounds (5
consonants and one vowel taught in activity 2) - Materials
- Neuhaus sound boards
- Sound board letter templates (website)
- Harcourt word builder cards
- Description
- Teacher dictates a cvc word
- Students repeat the word
- Students segment the word
- Students name the letters in the word
- Students move letter cards to bottom pocket
- Students read the word
- Students change the initial letter and read the
new word
334 Word Building (final sound)
- Objective
- Blend cvc patterns using known sounds (5
consonants and one vowel taught in activity 2) - Materials
- Neuhaus sound boards
- Sound board letter templates (website)
- Harcourt word builder cards
- Description
- Teacher dictates a cvc word
- Students repeat the word
- Students segment the word
- Students name the letters in the word
- Students move letter cards to bottom pocket
- Students read the word
- Students change the final letter and read the new
word
345 Word Building (middle sound)
- Objective
- Blend cvc patterns using known sounds (5
consonants and one vowel taught in activity 2) - Materials
- Neuhaus sound boards
- Sound board letter templates (website)
- Harcourt word builder cards
- Description
- Teacher dictates a cvc word
- Students repeat the word
- Students segment the word
- Students name the letters in the word
- Students move letter cards to bottom pocket
- Students read the word
- Teacher says change sat to sit continue with
known sounds
356 Say and Write
- Objective
- Writing cvc pattern words
- Materials
- Letter cards or tiles
- Pencil/paper or dry erase board/marker
- Description
- Teacher dictates cvc word
- Student segments word
- Student says each sound while picking up letter
card/tile and placing on paper/board - Student writes word
- Student reads word
367 Elkonin Boxes
377 Phoneme-Grapheme Mapping
- Provides explicit, multisensory instruction in
the alphabetic principal - Begins with sound segmentation and ends with
conventional orthography - Results in dramatic gains in conventional
spelling - Makes linguistic principles more concrets
- Louisa Moats
38Mapping, contd
- Always use one sound per box
- Spell words conventionally
- Students have grid paper, chips and a pencil
- Say the word and have students lay out chips for
each sound in the word - Students move the chips and fill in the letters
- Louisa Moats
39Summary
- Start with phoneme, link to grapheme
- Follow a planned sequence
- Teach concepts explicitly
- Use engaging, multi-sensory activities
- Move from simple to complex, concrete to
abstract, frequent to less frequent - Provide ample practice, including the words in
controlled text - Louisa Moats
40Words in the English Language
- 50 are wholly decodable
- 37 are off by only one sound
- 50 of the words we use are made up of the 107
most used high frequency words (Ehri, 1995) - Reading First Professional Development for
Harcourt Trophies, 2005
41Rapid Recognition Chart Names or Sounds
42Rapid Recognition Chart Kip the Ant Words from
Decodable Text (p. 403)
43Rapid Recognition Chart High Frequency Words
(Themes 5, 6, 7)
44Summary
- Begin with phoneme (sound), link to grapheme
(letter) - Follow planned sequence
- Teach concepts explicitly
- Use engaging, multi-sensory activities
- Move from simple to complex, concrete to
abstract, frequent to less frequent - Provide multiple opportunities for practice,
including reading in controlled text
45Early Phonics Interventions Materials