Title: Language Experience Approach: Group Experience Guidelines
1Chapter 11
- Language Experience Approach Group Experience
Guidelines
2Chapter 11Objectives
- Understand how to help young children develop a
sense of story and story structure. - Suggest ways that the cultural and linguistic
needs of diverse learners can be partially met
through balance reading instruction.
- Interpret and apply the major elements of a
balanced literacy program. - Describe six language routines that can be used
to structure daily reading and writing experience
for young children. - Explain the importance of teaching phonemic
awareness and the alphabetic principle.
3Guided Reading Lesson Overview
- Picture Talk
- First Reading
- Language Play
- For early emergent readers identification,
punctuation, or directionality. - For the fluency stage Identify text genre or
compound words - Rereading
- Retelling
- Follow-up Activity
4Language Experience Approach Group Experience
Guidelines
- The children participate in a common experience.
- Teachers and children discuss the common
experience. - Children dictate the chart while the teacher
transcribe the dictation. - Teachers and children share in reading the chart.
- Chart is used to learn about words and other
important language concepts such as punctuation,
left to right, and sight words.
5Individual Language Experience Using
Personalized Word Banks
- Integrate personally relevant words from outside
the classroom. - Provide meaningful, repeated exposure to personal
words. - Use these words for word games,
sentence-building, matching and skills
instruction. - Require student to use these words in spelling
and writing activities.
6Purposes Of Writing With Children
- To connect reading and writing using literature
as a take off point - To develop increasingly sophisticated writing
strategies - To demonstrate how to connect sounds in words to
letters and letter combinations - To expand childrens repertoire of writing genres
and forms. - To learn how the spelling process works.
7Basic Phonemic Awareness Tasks
- Hearing rhymes (rimes)
- Hearing alliteration (onset)
- Hearing assonance (vowel or vowel combination
sounds - Hearing and recognizing the non-matching sound or
word (oddity) - Hearing and blending syllables in words
- Splitting syllables and oral blending (onset-rime
whole word) - Manipulating sounds in words (substitutions and
deletions) - Connecting sounds with letters for spelling
8Directed Listening Thinking Activities
- Step 1 Introducing the story and Predicting
- Step 2 Listening, Thinking and Predicting
- Step 3 Supporting With Evidence
9Guidelines For Using Themed Literature Units
- Introduction to theme
- Book Talks
- Student self-selected books
- Self-selected reading(times and individual book
choices) - Creation of literature response projects
- Student dramas -discussion webs
- Dialogue retellings -big books
- Radio plays -homemade filmstrip
- New casts -host talk show
- Formula retellings -giant comic strip
- Meeting of the minds -Dioramas
- Mini Skill Lessons
- Presentation of Literature-response Projects
10Stages of the Writing Process
- Prewriting
- Writing/Drafting
- Revising and Editing
- Publishing
11Modifying Linguistic Variables For Using Content
Area Texts
- Reduce vocabulary load
- Preteach key vocabulary before students read and
assigned passage. - Use prereading questions, highlighting text,
notes, or questions in the margins, and graphic
organizers. - Use postreading discussion groups LEP learners to
more complex language input.
12Modifying Knowledge Variable For Using Content
Area Texts
- Before Reading
- Semantic Mapping
- Structure Overviews
- Discussion that draws attention to
Contradictions, opposing examples, exceptions,
categorizing, comparisons, relating to concepts
in the native language - During Reading
- Pattern guides
- Marginal Glosses
- After Reading
- Semantic Feature Analysis
- Small Group Discussion
13Modifying Literacy Variables For Using Content
Area Text
- Before Reading
- Preview the text showing students how to use text
features such as headings, subheadings, bold
text, and so on. - Help students set a purpose for reading by
teaching self-questioning strategies. - During Reading
- Provide directions, signals, and questions to
help students interact with the text and their
own background knowledge. - Suggest a study strategy and model its use.
- Help students adjust their reading rate to the
text difficulty - Help students develop skimming and scanning
skills - Help students predict outcomes, make and confirm
inferences, and solve problems. - Help students use metacognitive monitoring skills
- Remind students of when and how to use Fix up
or repair strategies to assist comprehension - After Reading
- Ask students to write or complete text pattern
guides.
14Teaching Comprehension Monitoring
- Determine the nature of the material to be
learned. - a). What king of material (expository,
narrative, etc.) is this text? - b). Is there a defined pattern in the way the
material is presented? - 2. Consider the essential task involved
- a). What is the critical information that is
likely to be assessed? - b). What study plan should follow?
- Consider your own strengths and weaknesses.
- a). Am I good at outlining?
- b). Am I good at creating graphic overview or
organizers? - Employ appropriate strategies to overcome
learning weakness. - a). What remedial strategies-look backs,
rereading, reading ahead, highlighting,
notetaking, summary writing, webbing, or out
lining can I use to help me?