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Module 5: Phonics Evidence and Strategies

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Reading Strategies for Secondary Teachers in other Content Areas ... Student attempts to sound out each sound in ight, aught, etc. 21 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Module 5: Phonics Evidence and Strategies


1
Module 5Phonics Evidence and Strategies
2
PPLSP Training Modules
  • 1.      Introduction to the Five Components of
    Reading
  • 2.      Introduction to the PPLSP and CBLA
  • 3.      Instructional Strategies
  • 4.      Phonemic Awareness Evidence and
    Strategies
  • 5.      Phonics Evidence and Strategies
  • 6.      Fluency Evidence and Strategies
  • 7.      Vocabulary Evidence and Strategies
  • 8.      Comprehension Evidence and Strategies
  • 9.      Reading Strategies for Secondary Teachers
    in other Content Areas
  • 10. Bodies of Evidence and a Process for
    Building the ILP

3
What does this say? What does it mean?
  • My favorite blumfit is the plenar blumfit. Plenar
    blumfits like to live on the Flendal Trump where
    it is very sniggled. But I can see them at the
    zoffestel. They have zoosefrosts with creamy
    blestfal swimfors.

4
Goals for this Module
  1. To clarify what phonics is and what it is not
    (and to differentiate phonics from phonemic
    awareness)
  2. To identify when phonics isnt working in the
    reading process
  3. To increase knowledge of appropriate strategies
    for teaching the skills of phonics

5
What is Phonics?
  • Phonics is the ability to
  • Learn the alphabetic system known as letter-sound
    or grapheme-phoneme correspondence
  • Apply this code knowledge during reading by
    blending the sounds into words (decoding)
  • Apply this code knowledge during writing by
    spelling words (encoding)

6
Why is phonics important?
  • Phonics is an essential part of the decoding
    process. Decoding is the primary means of word
    recognition. If a student cannot make
    sound-symbol associations (decode) with accuracy
    and automaticity, then fluency, vocabulary, and
    comprehension will suffer. Readers decipher words
    in five ways (1) decoding (2) spelling patterns
    (3) analogizing (4) sight words (5) context clues

7
What the research says
  • Teach phonics as long as you see the need in your
    students, because no clear research indicates the
    age or grade at which phonics instruction ceases
    to be effective.
  • Phonics instruction must be explicit and
    systematic (Adams, 1990).
  • Poorly developed word recognition skills are the
    most pervasive and debilitating source of reading
    challenges (Adams, 1990, Perfetti, 1986).
  • Phonics instruction is best taught for two
    consecutive years (K/1 or 1/2) (NRP, 2000).
  • Beyond Fifth Grade, students encounter
    approximately 10,000 new words a year (Nagy
    Andersen, 1984).

8
What the research says
High quality phonics instruction is based on the
following characteristics
  • Understanding the alphabetic principle
  • Development of phonological awareness
  • Obtaining a grounding in letters
  • Avoiding rule-dominated, boring,
    worksheet-driven, overuse of a reading program
  • Applying sufficient graphophonic (writing)
    applications
  • Practice in recognition of automatic words (sight
    words)
  • Recognition that phonics is only part of a good
    reading program (Stahl, Duffy-Hester, Stahl,
    1998).

9
When phonics skills are in place, you will see
  • Correct letter-sound correspondences
  • Students who are able to recognize spelling
    patterns
  • Students who know how to apply this knowledge
    during reading

10
What to look for and listen for in assessment
  • Difficulty pronouncing phonemes correctly ex. b
    for d
  • Difficulty blending sounds ex. g for gl
  • Difficulty identifying long or short vowels ex.
    pat for pet
  • Difficulty identifying smaller words in compound
    words ex. glas-sware for glassware
  • Difficulty identifying patterns ex. Tries to
    sound out patterns such as ight and ought.
  • Difficulty identifying affixes ex. Says
    in-ter-ac-tion
  • Difficulty with syllabication ex. Says
    pr-o--t-ec-tion

11
Phonics and Phonemic Awareness
  • Not the same thing!
  • Phonemic Awareness The sounds of language
  • Phonics The integration of sounds and symbols
  • If symbols are involved, it is phonics!

12
Phonics Skills
Phonics
Consonants
Vowels
Compound Words
Phonograms / Word Families
Affixes
Syllabication
13
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14
Consonants
  • Student has difficulty identifying and
    pronouncing consonant sounds, blend, and
    diagraphs in words.
  • Student does not recognize the sound that letters
    make when blended
  • Student substitutes /bl/ for /pl/

15
Consonants Strategy for tomorrow
  • Produce individual sounds, doubled sounds, and
    blends (timed activity)
  • Use worksheet to identify a sound.
  • Circle or highlight the sound or blend every time
    encountered, and then write them on the sheet.
  • Try to increase number of sounds identified each
    time attempted.

16
Vowels
  • Student has difficulty decoding and blending
    vowels within words.
  • Student tries to pronounce each vowel sound
    rather than blending.
  • Student consistently mispronounces vowel sounds.
  • /then/ instead of /than/

17
Vowels Strategy for tomorrow
  • Produce appropriate vowel sound based on phonic
    rule
  • Short Vowels
  • Use worksheet to break out sounds and highlight
    the vowel.
  • Then read sounds and repeat as a word.
  • Long Vowels
  • Determine how the magic e changes the sound of
    the vowel.
  • Long Vowels doubled

18
Compound Words
  • Student cannot distinguish smaller word units
    within the compound word and pronunciation is
    inaccurate.
  • Student does not see pancake pan cake
    (Student sees panc-ake)

19
Compound Words Strategy for tomorrow
  • Identify what two words make up the word
  • Worksheet using list of compound words to
    identify the two words that make up the compound
    word.

20
Phonograms / Word Families
  • Student cannot automatically identify and apply
    the most commonly used patterns of spelling
    and/or pronunciation.
  • Student attempts to sound out each sound in ight,
    aught, etc.

21
Phonograms Strategy for tomorrow
  • Word Families
  • Skill-rhyming words

22
Affixes
  • Student does not pronounce affixes correctly and
    cannot identify root/base words.
  • Student does not recognize pre- as a unit in
    pretest or preamble (Student sees
    pr-e-a-m-ble)
  • Student does not recognize -able as a unit in
    lovable or adjustable (Student sees
    l-o-va-ble)

23
Affixes Strategy for tomorrow
  • Affixes with base words
  • Auditory blending using examples of base words
    with affixes (prefixes and suffixes).

24
Syllabication
  • Students in intermediate, elementary, and high
    grades may gain understanding with instruction in
    syllabication and affixes.
  • Student tries to decode words sound by sound or
    break words into non-syllabic chunks, making
    decoding difficult.
  • Justify /j/ /u/ /st/ /i/ /fy/ instead of /just/
    /i/ /fy/

25
Syllabication Strategy for tomorrow
  • Understand the six syllable types and apply
    syllabication accordingly.
  • Closed syllable (rabbit)
  • Open syllable (pilot)
  • V-C/e (basement)
  • Vowel digraph (ai, ea, ay)
  • R controlled (carpet)
  • Consonant-le (table)

26
Does a Student Come to Mind?
  • Do you have a students who exhibits these
    characteristics?
  • How can you help him or her tomorrow?

27
Wrap Up
  • Turn to your neighbor and explain one new phonics
    skill you learned the most about today.
  • What does it look like and sound like?
  • What can you do during regular instruction to
    help a student who struggles in this area?
  • How would you explain the problem to a parent?
  • What strategies can parents use to help their
    child who struggles in this area?
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