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Phonemic Awareness, and Assessment

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First, children become aware of individual words in spoken language. ... Use reproducible from text (say 3 words pig, pan, kite) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Phonemic Awareness, and Assessment


1
Phonemic Awareness, and Assessment
  • Chapter 7Anne-Marie Utley - Ronda Hair

2
Steps to Phonological Awareness
  • First, children become aware of individual words
    in spoken language. Following this, children
    develop an awareness of the syllables within
    words.
  • Second, children become aware that syllables are
    made up of onsets and rimes.
  • Third, Children become aware of individual
    sounds, or phonemes, in spoken language
  • Fourth, children develop the ability to
    manipulate individual sounds in language.

3
Phonemic Awareness
  • Phonemic awareness, conceptually, is defined as
    an understanding that spoken language and words
    are made up of individual sounds.
  • Phonemic awareness, performance, is defined as
    the ability to pick out and manipulate sounds in
    spoken words and language.
  • Awareness is not all, we need to teach our
    students how to manipulate the sounds as well

4
List of Phonemic Awareness Tasks Listed from
least difficult to difficult
  • 1- Rhyming
  • 2- Hearing sounds in words (oddity and
    same-different judgment tasks)
  • 3- Counting syllables and sound
  • 4- Isolating beginning, ending, and middle sounds
    in words
  • 5- Substituting and deleting sounds in words and
    syllables
  • 6- Blending syllables, onset and rimes, and
    sounds into words
  • 7- Segmenting words into syllables, onset and
    rimes, and sounds
  • 8- Representing sounds in language and words with
    symbols in spelling and writing

5
Assessments for Assessing Phonemic
Awareness
6
Recognizing Rhyming Words Do These Rhyme?
  • Will indicate whether the student can recognize
    rhymes
  • Word pairs with at least 50 that rhyme
  • Model examples and non-examples
  • Record student responses

7
Oddity Task Which One Doesnt Belong?
  • Designed to measure development of onset and rime
  • Awareness versus phoneme awareness
  • Words sets of three words
    (can also use pictures)
  • Student identifies the odd word out!
  • Soap Six Dog
  • (Beginning Consonant Dog is out)
  • Car Man Mop
  • (Beginning Consonant Car is out)

8
Syllable and Sound Counting Task
  • Used to assess understanding of syllables
  • Use 10 picture or word pairs
  • Say the word - count the sounds with fingers
  • Record student responses

9
Initial Consonant Sounds Test
  • Measures whether students have developed
    awareness of beginning sounds
  • Use reproducible from text
    (say 3 words pig, pan, kite)
  • Student identifies the word with the different
    beginning sound
  • Record student responses

10
Same-Different Word Pair Task
  • Measures development of syllable, onset and rime
    and phoneme awareness
  • Use 10 word pairs or pictures
  • Child will identify same or different (Hammer,
    Hammock)
  • Record student responses

11
Auditory Sound Blending Task
  • Used to determine student's ability to recognize
    words by blending the sounds in words
  • Higher skill level than phonemic awareness than
    rhyming
  • Teacher uses "word rubber banding"
    stretching the word into segments such as
    m-a-n

12
Segmenting Sounds
  • Student abilities are assessed as they listen to
    and isolate sounds
  • Teacher uses 15 words consisting of 3 phonemes
    each
  • The words have target sounds in the beginning,
    middle and end of words
  • Teacher says a word and the student identifies
    the place in the word that
  • The sound can be heard
  • Target sound "M" Slamending

13
  • "An informed teacher can be successful in
    teaching phonemic awareness, alphabetic
    principle, and early phonics with out the aid of
    a commercial program. These skills must be part
    of a comprehensive program that develops
    comprehension and word meaning simultaneously
    (2007 Reutzel, Cooter)."
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