word recognition review of high frequency words, phonemic awareness, and phonics

50
Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Upload: hassan-search

Post on 14-Dec-2015

225 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Word Recognition

Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness,

and Phonics

Page 2: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Stages in Reading Words

Prealphabetic Usually around PK and K Environmental print Selective association Might use random letters to spell

words May be able to spell their name

bec/they have memorized the words.

Page 3: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Stages in Reading Words

Partial Alphabetic Letter-sound relationships used to

read words. Words may be represented by using

one letter. May begin to use vowels, but words

will not be spelled correctly.

Page 4: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Stages in Reading Words

Full Alphabetic Sometimes also called letter-name

stage. Begin to process all letters in words. Begin to apply their knowledge of

letter-sound relationships. Cautious reading word-by-word. Vowel sounds are spelled although it

may not be correct.

Page 5: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Stages in Reading Words

Consolidated Alphabetic Sometimes called within-word pattern

stage. Longer and more sophisticated words

are processed. Begin to recognize words

instantaneously on sight without having to analyze letter by letter.

Page 6: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Word Recognition

What is word recognition? Strategies we use to identify the oral

equivalent of a word. What are areas included in word

recognition? Sight Words Phonemic Awareness Structural Analysis Phonics

Page 7: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Sight Words High Frequency Words

Dolch Fry

Colors Numbers How can we teach this type of word

recognition area? Examples of centers—BINGO,

Concentration, PIG, Cloze, Roll-Say-Keep, and Gameboards.

Page 8: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Phonemic Awareness Awareness of Sounds in the Speech Stream

How many sounds do you hear in cat, horse, and bath?

Ways we can teach… Blending Segmenting Substituting—more advanced skill

Lots of language play Rhymes Songs

Page 9: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness—Rhyming Word Sit Down

Children walk around the room in a big circle taking one step each time a rhyming word is said by the teacher.

When the teacher says a word that does not rhyme with the other words, then the children sit down.

Examples—she, tree, flea, spree, key, bee, sea, went (children sit down)

Page 10: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness—Syllable Clap Talk with students about why

knowing about syllables can help them read and write words.

Ask students to clap with you to identify the syllables they hear in each word.

Examples—adapt according to level of studentairplane table porcupine

school vacation dinner

calendar television football

Page 11: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness—Identification of Sounds in Words

Using a song format to isolate the sound heard in the words—sung to Old McDonald.

What’s the sound that starts these words—turtle and time and teeth?

(Wait for response) /t/ is the sound that starts these words—turtle, time, and teeth. With a /t/, /t/ here, and /t/, /t/ there, here a /t/, there a /t/,

everywhere a /t/, /t/. /t/ is the sound that starts these words—turtle and time and

teeth. Repeat with also with middle sounds and ending

sounds.

Page 12: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness—Teaching Phonemic Blending—”I Say it Slowly, You Say it Fast” Game

Explain to students that you will say the words slowly. Students should repeat the word back to you.

Example— Teacher says /k/-/ă/-/t/ Child says cat.

Example— Teacher says /r/-/ŏ/-/k/ Child says rock.

Page 13: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness—Sound boxes

Show students how to make sound boxes on their paper or lap boards.

As the student says a word, then she stretches it out, while sliding a marker into each box as the sound, or phoneme, is heard.

Example— dog horse Lamp teeth

Page 14: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness— Phonemic Segmentation

This activity teaches phonemic segmentation using a song format—Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star (sort of) Listen, listen to my word, Then tell me all the sounds you heard

race /r/ is one sound /ā/ is two /s/ is last in race, it’s true.

Thanks for listening to my word, And telling all the sounds you heard.

Page 15: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonemic Awareness— Consonant Substitution

The most difficult task to do—substitution—requires multiple levels of processing.

Children listen to a given word, then substitute a new sound in the word.

Example— What rhymes with pig and starts with /d/--dig. What rhymes with book and starts with /k/--

cook. What rhymes with sing and starts with /r/--ring. What rhymes with dog and starts with /fr/--frog.

Page 16: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Structural Analysis Looking at parts of the words, or chunks. Knowledge of syllables. Includes compound words, contractions,

multisyllable words, inflectional endings, prefixes, suffixes.

Teach by analogy by focusing on onset and rime: Onset—part of the syllable prior to the vowel Rime—vowel to the end of the syllable Example—cat– “c” is onset, “-at” is rime

If I can spell cat, then I can spell bat, fat, hat, mat, pat, rat, sat, and vat.

Example—hit—”h” is onset, “-it” is rime If I can spell hit, then I can spell bit, fit, kit, lit, sit, wit, and zit.

Page 17: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Implications for Instruction in Syllabic Analysis

Ss should be taught to process all of the syllables in words. Ss need to be taught to see patterns in words. Ss need to be flexible in their decoding of words-they should be

prepared to try another pronunciation if one way does not work. Ss should integrate context and syllabic analysis. Ss need to be reminded to use orthographic aspects of phonics

(awareness of sequence of letters when spelling the word). Ss should be aware that an element in a multisyllabic word may not

be read in the same way as it is represented in a single syllable word (carrots, car).

Elements such as –tion and –ture as in mention and future, which only occur in multisyllabic words, need a careful introduction, frequent review, and a great deal of practice.

Page 18: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Generalization Approach to Teaching Syllabic Analysis

Ask students to sort a group of words. Teach a generalization (general rule) for dividing words, such as:

Easy affixes-most form a separate syllable (ex. help-ful, re-build) Compound words-usually are two separate words (ex. sun-set, night-

fall) Two consonants between two vowels-usually divide between the two

consonants (ex. win-ter, con-cept) The ending –le-usually combined with a preceding consonant to create

a separate syllable (ex. cra-dle, ma-ple) Two vowels together-a limited number of words split between the two

vowels (ex. i-de-a, di-al). The idea behind teaching Ss an awareness of syllabic analysis is

that it helps students to decode an unfamiliar by separating the word into its syllabic parts, then recombining the parts into a whole.

Page 19: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Pattern Approach to Syllabic Analysis

Introduce the syllabic pattern-introduce the pattern in a single syllable word

Present the pattern along with a model word Formulate a generalization. Guided Practice Application Assessment and Review Extension

Page 20: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Multisyllabic Patterns In order of difficulty:

Easy affixes: play-ing Compound words: base-ball Closed syllable words: rab-bit Open syllable words: ba-by Final –e markers: es-cape Vowel digraphs: a-gree Other patterns: cir-cle

See also pp. 250-252 for major syllable patterns.

Page 21: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Finally, we get to Phonics! Phonics, graphophonics, graphophonemics—all the same thing. Breakdown—

Graph—means written Phonic—means sound Study of letter-sound relationships

How does this differ from phonemic awareness? If you know that there are 3 sounds in cat, then you are

phonemically aware. If you know that the first sound /k/ is made by the letter “c”, then

that is phonics. Phonics is all about teaching the code—how students can

break down words to figure out how to say the word or how to spell the word.

Page 22: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Key Terms to Remember

Phoneme Individual speech sounds How many phonemes are in bath? (3)

Grapheme Refers to the letter that corresponds to a

specific phoneme What graphemes represent the phonemes

you heard in bath-- /b/, /ă/, /th/.

Page 23: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Key Terms to Remember Morpheme

Smallest unit of meaning--could be a word, a prefix, a suffix, or a root.

How many morphemes are in these words? Unladylike

un- 'not' lady '(well behaved) female adult human' like 'having the characteristics of'

Dogs Dog- animal s-plural marker on nouns

Technique One morpheme—technique consists of only one meaningful word part,

however it does have two syllables.

Page 24: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Basic Principles of Phonics Instruction Must be Functional

It must teach skills necessary for decoding words.

Must be Useful The skills should be ones that students do not

already know. Must be Contextual

The skills being taught should be related to reading tasks in which students are currently engaged or will soon be engaged.

Page 25: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Consonants There are 25 sounds in English. Some are spelled with two letters

that represent one sound. Digraph—ch, sh, th

Some are groups of consonants that represent two or three letter sounds. Clusters—most are composed of l, r,

or s with another consonant sound.

Page 26: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Vowels

There are 16 vowels sounds in the English language.

This number can vary by dialect. Types of vowel sounds:

Short vowel sounds--/a/, /e/, /i/, /o/, /u/

Long vowel sounds--/ā/, /ē/, /ī/, /ō/, /ū/

Page 27: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

More Vowel Sounds Other vowel sounds—

/aw/--daughter, law, walk /oi/--noise, toy /ŏŏ/--wood, should, push / ōō/--soon, new, prove, group /ow/--tower, south /∂/--above, operation, similar

R-controlled vowel sounds— /ar/--far /air/--hair /i(∂)r/--steer, clear, here /∂r/--her, sir, fur /or/--horse, door, tour

Page 28: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Onset and Rimes Onset-the consonant or consonant cluster preceding the

rime Rime-vowel, vowels, or consonants that follow the onset Cat

C-onset At-rime

That Th-onset At-rime

Refer to pp. 216-218 for a list of major word patterns that can be taught using the idea of onset and rime.

Page 29: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Scope and Sequence Consonants usually presented first.

Fewer spelling options for consonants. Initial letters, which are usually

consonants, are best taught first. Skills taught in one grade are usually

addressed again in another grade. Use major word patterns. Using decodable texts. Look at S&S on page 214.

Page 30: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Teaching Initial Consonants Phonics instruction usually begins with initial

consonants. Being the first sound in a word makes it easier

for students to hear.. Beginning sounds are also usually the first

sound to appear in students’ invented spelling. Begin phonics lesson with emphasis on

phonemic awareness.

Page 31: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Teaching Final Consonants Handle the teaching of final consonants

in the same way as initial consonants. Final consonants are significant aid in

the decoding of printed words, so be sure to not neglect them.

You can teach the final sound as you also teach word patterns that use them. /d/ in -ad

Page 32: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Teaching Consonant Clusters

Sometimes called blends Combination of consonants

sp- in spot str- in straw

It can be difficult for students to separate the sounds (especially for “l” and “r” clusters.

Begin with “s” clusters. Introduce a word with the cluster, then also a word with one part of the cluster missing (ex. stick-sick; stand-sand; stink, sink). Ask students what the second word is missing that was present in the first word.

Slowly say the word and have students count the sounds (ex. stick).

Page 33: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Teaching Vowel Correspondences

Vowels can be taught in the same way as consonants.

The main difference is that the vowels can be spoken in isolation without distorting the sound.

Vowels can be taught in isolation or as part of patterns.

Page 34: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Approaches to Teaching Phonics Analytic

Studying sounds within the context of the whole word.

Example--/w/ is the sound heard at the beginning of the word wagon.

Synthetic Saying a word sound by sound then

synthesizing the sounds into words. Example--/k/ /a/ /t/ equals cat.

Page 35: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Analytic Phonics—Steps Analytic Phonics provides students with

opportunities to analyze whole words and break the words down into smaller, manageable parts.

Identify a list of words that share a common letter-sound relationship.

Say each word aloud to students and pause to let students repeat the word back. Move through each word in the list.

Ask students what they notice about the words, such as how the words look or sound alike or different.

Through this discussion, lead students into a recognition of the common letter-sound relationship.

Help students to identify a generalization about the letter-sound relationship.

Page 36: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Synthetic Phonics—Steps Synthetic phonics first teaches students

letter/sounds, then students practice blending the sounds together to make words.

Introduce each letter name to students. Teach the sound that each letter makes. As each letter is written on the board or chart paper

then point to the letter, and say the sound that each letter makes.

Make a hand motion to indicate blending the sounds together.

Continue this process until students can easily recognize the letter and the corresponding sound.

Page 37: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Steps for Teaching-Analytic/Synthetic Combination

Phonemic awareness-introduce sound (ex. /m/, talk about position of mouth when forming the sound (lips are pressed together), call attention to words in a poem or other text that have that sound

Letter-sound integration-write the words with that sound on the board-ex. man, moon, milk; discuss with students that these words all have the /m/ sound that is represented by the letter “m”

Guided practice-read a story that has this sound, sing a song, read or poem, and/or compose sentences

Application-students read selections that contain that sound Writing and spelling-review the formation of the letter “m”, dictate

some easy words with this letter/sound. Assessment and reteaching-note whether students are able to

apply their knowledge of “m” while reading or writing, review and reteach as necessary

Page 38: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Centers

This next section provides examples of different centers as each is related to a stage of reading.

Page 39: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Emergent Stage Age Level

Usually around prekindergarten or kindergarten. Reading Words

Do not understand that letters in written words have sounds.

Limited to reading words from memory—sight word reading. Guess words from context. Will pretend to read text.

Writing Words Scribbles, letter-like forms, or random letters that probably

do not correspond to a matching letter-sound relationship. Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage: Emergent

Page 40: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Developing Fluency

Fluency—the ability to read text accurately and quickly.

Two components: Automaticity—recognize words rapidly Accuracy—being able to identify the word

Repeated Readings Shared Reading Guided Reading

Choral Readings Read Aloud

Page 41: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Example of Phonics Centers Emergent Stage

BINGO BRS Sort PTM Sort Follow the Path Game—BRSPTM CFD Sort 3-Cat Sort 5-Cat Sort

From WTW Spelling Stage: Emergent Stage

Page 42: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Beginning Stage Age Level

Usually begins around kindergarten or first grade. Reading Words

Begin to detect letters in words to some of the sounds they correspond to.

May use partial letter cues to identify unfamiliar words. May misread words with similar letters—man for men, this for that, horse

for house. May sometimes read words backward as they learn directionality—was

for saw. Sight word vocabulary continues to grow. Learn the sounds that correspond to basic consonants—b, d, f, j, k, l, m,

n, p, r, s, t, v, z—but not soft sounds of c (/s/) and g (/j/) or hard sounds of c (/k/) and g (/g/).

Will finger-point (point to words as they are read) and read aloud slowly word by word.

Page 43: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Beginning Stage Continued Writing Words

Beginning and ending sounds will be represented.

Letter names used to spell vowel sounds. Begin to spell phonetically. Most silent letters are omitted. Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage: Letter

Name-Alphabetic Stage

Page 44: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonics Centers

Beginning Stage LRS sort—l-blends, r-blends, s-blends ch and th sort—digraphs ch and sh Shopping Game—ch and sh Gruff Drops Troll at the Bridge—r-blend

words Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage:

Letter Name-Alphabetic Stage

Page 45: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Transitional Stage Age Level

Usually around Second Grade and can continue through Fourth Grade. Reading Words

Begin to learn chunks of words, such as onset, rime, syllables, affixes, and root words, and how these chunks occur in different words.

Begin to recognize spelling patterns that occur frequently in words: -it, -at, -in, -an, -and, -all.

Sight word vocabulary continues to grow as they begin to store longer words in their memory.

Reading words by analogy becomes easier as they begin to recognize spelling patterns in words.

Children begin to read with more expression as they develop fluency and ease with reading.

Writing Words Practice dividing written words into onset-rime. Practice reading and spelling words by analogy. Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage: Within Word Pattern Stage

Page 46: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonics Centers Transitional Stage Flip-It—long and short vowel patterns,

featuring CVCe Treasure—r-controlled vowel patterns Turkey Feathers—long vowel sound

patterns Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage:

Within Word Pattern Stage

Page 47: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Intermediate Level Age Level

Also can begin around Second, Third, or Fourth Grade and can continue through eighth grade.

Reading Focus at this level is on broader elements of words represented by syllables. Continue to develop fluency and read with expression. Preferred way of reading is probably silent versus oral. May begin to experiment with different types of genres in reading, as they

explore which one they like the best. Writing

Look at words that represent more complex phonic generalizations, such as adding inflectional endings, prefixes/suffixes, and how and when to do consonant doubling.

Help explore vocabulary words by looking at relationships between words. Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage: Syllables and Affixes Stage

Page 48: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonics Centers

Intermediate Stage Freddy, the Hopping, Diving, Jumping

Frog—double, do nothing, drop the –e The Apple and the Bushel—differentiate

between –el and –le endings Homograph Concentration—using

context Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage:

Syllables and Affixes Stage

Page 49: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Advanced Stage Age Level

Can begin around fifth grade and continue into high school. Reading Words

Readers have highly developed automaticity and speed in reading familiar and unfamiliar words.

Most words they read are already in their sight word vocabulary. Readers have multiple strategies they can use when they come across a word they

do not know. Recognition of words is so automatic that the major focus shifts to finding meaning

from text. Writing Words

Look at words with prefixes and suffixes that are not as common in words, and explore how to know word meaning based on the prefix, suffix, or context the word is used.

Explore etymology of words. Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage: Derivational Relations

Page 50: Word Recognition Review of High Frequency Words, Phonemic Awareness, and Phonics

Examples of Phonics Centers with Vocabulary Connection Advanced Stage—also known as

Derivational Relations Word Sort— -tion or -sion Word Trees Jeopardy Semantic Feature Analysis Combining roots and affixes

Corresponding WTW Spelling Stage: Derivational Relations Stage