Title: Word Study Demonstration Activity
1Word Study Demonstration Activity
- Example Rhyming
- Sign up for your activity
- Draft due March 4 (Topic, relevant words)
- Actual Activity Due April 1
2Phonics I Letter-Sound Relations
3Objectives for Phonics - Part 1 You will be able
to
- Describe rationale for teaching phonics
(letter-sound relations) - Identify what beginning readers need to know
- Understand/Practice the correct sequence for
introducing letter-sound correspondences - Identify activities for practicing segmenting,
blending, and substituting phonemes (with
letters)
4Why teach letter-sound relations?
5Case 1 What does this student struggle with?
- Words known
- and
- bat
- cut
- he
- hot
- mom
- no
Words not known an but me not
Good sight word knowledge, but its masking
students lack of understanding of the alphabetic
principle (1) sounds are represented by
letters and (2) those letters represent
the sounds rather consistently
6Case 2 What does she struggle with?
- Pseudoword
- kot
- swip
- gan
- dree
- shub
- flate
- meep
Childs response ka s ga daer ser fa mech
Some knowledge of first sound in a syllable, but
little ability to decode the vowel and final
phoneme Needs teach vowel sounds how to
blend sounds into a word words need to
make sense
7Case 3 What does this 3rd grader struggle with?
Childs response could same wear finger curtur mat
erial potograph
- Word
- cold
- soon
- war
- figure
- certain
- mineral
- paragraph
Paying attention to beginning and final grapheme
but ignores middle grapheme and pulls from words
he knows Needs attention to medial
letters/sounds and monitoring
8What do children need to know and be able to do
to read words?
- Know the speech sounds associated with written
letters in words - Know how to put those sounds together to form a
pronounceable word - Have a strong sense of English spelling/writing
patterns - Recognize words rapidly
Isabel Beck, 2006
9Principles of Teaching Letter-Sound
Correspondence
Isabel Beck, 2006
- Instruction should highlight letter-sound
relationship at all positions in the word (e.g.,
beginning, middle, end) - Instruction should link phonemic awareness with
letter sound correspondence - Three perspectives
- Phonemic awareness ? Decoding
- Decoding ? Phonemic awareness
- Phonemic Awareness ? ? Decoding
- No evidence that engaging children in
sophisticated speech-only tasks
(substitution/manipulation) will improve
decoding. In fact, some evidence that knowledge
of letters helps complete these sophisticated
tasks (Isabel Beck, 2006).
10SYSTEMATIC Sequence of Instruction for
Letter-Sound Correspondence
- Consonants (p. 34-35 m..s..a..t)
- Vowels (p. 39-42 short vowel a)
- Two-letter graphemes and phonemes (p. 43-46 ea
vs. ee vs. magic e) - Successive blending (p. 52-53 s gt a gt sa gt
sat)
Isabel Beck, 2006
11Introducing Letter-Sound Correspondences
- Introduce letters in sequence based on frequency
of use in texts and spelling - m, s, a, t before x, z
- Hard /k/ sound (can, cat) before soft /s/ (cent)
- Hard /g/ (girl) before soft /g/ (gym)
- Begin with letter-sounds that can be combined to
make many words (CVC) - m, s, a, t at, am, as, mat, sat, Sam
- Introduce common consonants and few vowels
- M, s, a, t, i it, mit, sit
12Introducing Letter-Sound Correspondences
- Introduce just a few and then lots of practice!
- Once students consistently know a letter-sound,
present a new sound/letter mixed in with
previously known ones (built in review) - s t m t p t s
13Look on the wiki for many letter-sound
correspondence activities
14Letter-Sound Instruction
Isabel Beck, 2006
- Sequence Consonants gt Vowels gt Sounds
represented by more than one letter (ee, ai, ph,
ng) - Lesson Sequence for Teaching Consonant
Letter-Sound Correspondence - Develop phonemic awareness by focusing on the
sound represented by a particular letter in the
initial position. - Connect the printed letter with the sound the
letter represents. - Discriminate among words that have letter-sound
in the initial position and those that do not. - Develop phonemic awareness by focusing on the
sound in the final position. - Discriminate among words that have letter-sound
in the final position and those that do not. - Discriminate among words that have the
letter-sound in the initial and final positions.
15Ill model gt Then you try
Consonants
- Mary Mouse Begin with same sound /m/ - you say
sound along with me - Letter Sound This the letter m Each time I
say the sound, touch the letter m, and say /m/. - Discriminate at beginning Find your letter m. If
word begins with /m/ sound, hold your letter up
if not, shake your head - Hear at end In broom, /m/ sound comes at end.
Say/think of other words with /m/ at the end. - Discriminate at end Hold up or shake head
- Discriminate at beginning and end. Position your
letter m card correctly in your word pocket.
16Vowel-Sound Correspondence(same as consonants
but focus on initial medial)
Isabel Beck, 2006
- Focus on short vowel sound in initial position
- Connect sound with letter
- Discriminate words that have that vowel sound at
beginning and other words that do not - Focus on short vowel sound in medial position
- Discriminate words that have that vowel sound in
the middle and other words that do not - Discriminate among words that have the
letter-sound in the initial and final positions.
17Ill model gt Then you try
Vowels
- Apple, ant, at Begin with same sound /a/ - you
say sound along with me - Letter Sound This the letter a Each time I
say the sound, touch the letter a, and say /a/. - Discriminate at beginning Find your letter a. If
word begins with /a/ sound, hold your letter up
if not, shake your head - Hear in middle In hat, /a/ sound comes in
middle. Say/think of other words with /a/ in the
middle - Discriminate in middle Hold up or shake head
- Discriminate at beginning and middle. Position
your letter a card correctly in your word pocket.
18Segmenting, Blending, and Substituting Phonemes
(now linked to letters)
19Need more explicit instruction and practice in
blending sounds?
20Substituting/Manipulating Phonemes and Reviewing
Short Vowels in CVC word patternsChange A Hen to
A Fox
- Find
- h, e, n, p, t, i, s, x, f, o
You try.with your letters
21Directions
22Seven Other Lessons For Changing A Hen To A Fox
cat bat hat rat pat pet pen hen
cat hat rat rag bag big dig pig
pig big wig win fin fit fat cat
fox box bop top mop map mat cat
- pig
- rig
- rid
- rib
- rob
- Bob
- box
- fox
bug dug dig pig pin pen ten hen
bug hug dug dig big bag bat cat
23Homework Due Tuesday Change dates due to Snow
Day!
- Biggam, Ch. 3 (Decoding Word Recognition)
- Underlying Concepts Principles
- Assessing
- Teaching
- Beck (see syllabus for old pages see wikispace
for new pages) refresh class activities - WTW, Ch. 5 (Letter Name-Alphabet Stage)
- p. 161 sequence
24Empty versions of slides for handouts
25Case 1 What does this student struggle with?
- Words known
- and
- bat
- cut
- he
- hot
- mom
- no
Words not known an but me not
26Case 2 What does she struggle with?
- Pseudoword
- kot
- swip
- gan
- dree
- shub
- flate
- meep
Childs response ka s ga daer ser fa mech
27Case 3 What does this 3rd grader struggle with?
Childs response could same wear finger curtur mat
erial potograph
- Word
- cold
- soon
- war
- figure
- certain
- mineral
- paragraph
28Once you teach, provide LOTS of practice (model,
shared, interactive, guided, independent)
- Model/Shared (Sharing Circle gt Centers)
- Mrs. Jones Kindergarten Letter Names and Letter
Sounds - Song Lyrics for Children (more on YouTube)
- Guided/Independent (Center activities)
- Read Write Think Picture Match
- Starfall ABC Alphabet
- Monitor/Reteach
- PALS Phonological Awareness Literacy Activities
(that correlate with PALS assessment)
29Literacy Photo Journal DirectionsDue March 6 -
Help on Feb 27
- A. Pre-Reflection Activity
- B. Collect 10 Photos of classroom materials,
structures, and activities (no students!) - Interview teacher if possible
- C. Observations and Interpretations
- Description, location, literacy purpose, and why
appropriate - D. Post-Reflection Activity
- Understanding, vision, opinion, ideas,
realizations