Uploaded: 7 years ago
Contributor: Guest
Category: Education
Type: Lecture Notes
Tags: phonics, vowels, students, pattern, sounds, letters, usually, stands, letter, followed, phonics, generalization-, consonants
additional, connections, native
Rating:
N/A
|
Filename: 0133917762_pp5.ppt
(1.19 MB)
Credit Cost: 2
Views: 159
Last Download: N/A
|
Description
Lecture notes used in class. Chapter 5 Author of the textbook is Gunning
Transcript
Creating Literacy Instruction for All Students, Ninth Edition
Chapter 5
Teaching Phonics,
High-Frequency Words, and Syllabic Analysis
Developed by:
Thomas G. Gunning, Professor Emeritus
Southern Connecticut State University
How Words Are Read
Predicted
Sounded out
Chunked
Read by analogy
Recognized immediately
High-frequency words learned as readers make connections between letters & sounds
Stages in Reading Words
Prealphabetic
Partial Alphabetic
Full Alphabetic
Consolidated Alphabetic
Implications of Stage Theory
Phonics approach best
Gear approach to students’ needs
Basic Principles
of Phonics Instruction
Functional: Teach only necessary skills
Useful: Teach only needed skills
Contextual: Teach skills as needed
Planned, systematic, explicit
Phonics Elements
Consonants
Single letters: single sound
Digraphs: 2 letters--1 sound: ch
Clusters: 2 or more letters & sounds: st
Vowels
Onsets and rimes: h-at
Approaches to Teaching Phonics
Analytic: Sound in context of word- beginning sound of hat
Synthetic: Sound by sound: /h/-/a/-/t/
Combination of analytic & synthetic
Can also be:
Whole or whole-to-part
Embedded or systematic
Teaching Initial Consonants
Phonemic awareness
Letter-sound integration
Guided practice
Application
Writing and spelling
Assessment & reteaching
Reinforcement (books, sorting, games, software, rhymes)
Teaching Blends
Difficulty separating second sound in blend from the first: /t/ in /st/
Say a word containing a blend & have students count out sounds, holding up a finger for each sound.
Build on what students know. For stick, have them sound out sick as you write it on board & then ask what needs to be added to sick to make stick. Emphasize sound of t.
A Sample Sort
Teaching Variable Consonants
The letter c usually stands for /k/ when followed by a, o, or u.
The letter c usually stands for /s/ when followed by e, i, or y.
The letter g usually stands for /g/ when followed by a, o, or u.
Use variability (Try Another Sound) strategy.
Teaching Vowel Correspondences
Phonemic awareness
Letter-sound integration
Guided practice
Application
Assessment & reteaching
Teaching the Word Building Approach
Building words by adding onsets to rimes
Building words by adding rimes to onsets
Providing mixed practice
Creating a model word
Guided practice
Application
Writing and spelling
Extension
Assessment and review
Brief Scope and Sequence
Initial consonants-easiest to say, high frequency
Short a and i so as to form words with consonants
Additional consonants & consonant digraphs
Final consonants
Additional short vowels
2-syllable words composed of familiar elements
Blends
Long vowels: final-e, digraphs (ee, oa)
R vowels
Other vowels: /aw/, /oy/, /ow/, /oo/, /OO/
Practice and Application
Rhymes
Word wall
Secret messages
Secret word
Making words
Technology
Reading selections containing element taught– apply decoding strategies
Vowel Generalizations
Vowel digraphs- may represent long day), short (bread), or other sound (cow).
Use variability strategy (try another sound).
Closed syllable generalization- cap
Open syllable generalization- hobo
Final-e generalization- cape
.
Decoding Strategies
Pronounceable word part
Analogy
Context
Sound by sound
Try another sound
Sound correction/model word routine
Monitoring/cross check
Writing
Choice
Affirmation
Diagnostic
Decodable Texts
Reinforce phonics elements
No text completely decodable
Transitional nature
Balance decodable with predictable
Flexible approach
Teaching Phonics to ELL
Be aware of similarities & differences
Determine degree of literacy in native language
Help with sounds not present in native language
Enlist help of ESL teacher
Build on what students know
Monitoring Progress in Phonics
Administer Phonics Inventory
Place at level where misses more than 5 words out of 20 or 5 in a row
Set goal and track progress periodically
Readability Based on Phonics Elements
Use text that contains familiar phonics elements
Use Phonics Readability Chart-based on sequence used in most programs
Provides reinforcement in use of phonics skills
High-Frequency Words
Also known as sight words
Teaching
Make connections between letters & sounds where possible
Use children’s books
Use word banks
Use rhymes, software, apps, language experience stories, shared reading, environmental print
Building Fluency
Requires accuracy & automaticity
Critical test of fluency: Decode & comprehend at same time
Focus on comprehension
Varying reading rate according to text & purpose
Requires solid word analysis skills
Fluency in both silent & oral reading
Techniques for Fostering Fluency
Choral reading
Modeled techniques
Repeated reading
Recorded book method
Alternate reading
Increasing amount of reading
Phrasing of text
Syllabic Analysis
Process all syllables
See patterns
Be flexible
Integrate with context
Use orthographic aspects
Be aware of pronunciation changes
Emphasize advanced elements
Use generalization & pattern approach
Syllabic Patterns
Easy affixes: -ing, -er, -ly
Compound words: sun-set, night-fall
Two consonants between two vowels: win-ter, con-cept
One consonant between two vowels: ma-jor, e-vil
The ending le: cra-dle, ma-ple
Adjacent vowels together: i-de-a, di-et
Syllabic Patterns (Cont.)
Final-e pattern: es-cape, ad-vice
Vowel digraph pattern: ob-tain, re-peat, aw-ful
R-vowel pattern: car-pet, per-fect
Other patterns: ture- future; tion, sion: sta-tion, vi-sion.
|
|