Transcript Slide 1
Introduction
to
Word Study
Created by Jevonne Smith
Let’s Be Honest…
The Word Study program is a process… it takes
TIME! Be patient with yourself. Each year of
implementation becomes easier!
It is OKAY not to know/understand the features
and or sorts
Must be willing to seek out help/assistance from
other colleagues
Several resource books are available
Let’s Be Honest…
This will be UNCOMFORTABLE for MANY!
Expect to see the “unexpected”
Must be taught with FIDELITY. Builds from
one feature to another, so it is critical that
each feature be taught thoroughly.
Educate our parents
What the Research Says
Researched based developmental spelling program
Charles Read (1971); researched preschool children’s spelling
inventions
Edmund Henderson and his students and colleagues at the
University of Virginia confirmed and extended Read’s findings.
Their research suggested a stage-like progression of spelling
development through which children advance from a reliance
on sound to more patterned-based strategies as their
experiences with print and the English spelling system
broaden.
The stage that best characterizes a child’s spelling is known
as the child’s stage of development. This differs from child to
child, even within the same class, because children progress
at different rates through stages.
More is involved in learning words than just memory.
Word study reflects the interplay of sound, pattern, and
meaning relationships. “Those who set out to remember
every letter of every word will never make it. Those who try
to spell by sound alone will be defeated. Those who learn
how to ‘walk through’ words with sensible expectations,
noting sound, pattern and meaning relationships, will know
what to remember, and they will learn to spell English
(Henderson, 1990).”
In word study, students are taught to explore the
sound, pattern, and meaning relationships among
words through various compare and contrast
strategies known as word sorts.
By examining words in their reading and words used
in their writing, children discover consistencies that
enable them to generalize their understandings to
other words and learn to read and spell more
efficiently.
Helping children learn to “walk through words”
requires informed teachers who know where each
student is along the continuum of spelling knowledge
and who use this information to plan instruction that
is appropriate for diverse needs.
Recognizing spelling errors is easy, but knowing how
to interpret them for meaningful instruction is
difficult without a firm understanding of the way word
knowledge develops.
The Developmental Spelling Analysis (DSA) was
developed by Kathy Ganske in 1999, to enable
teachers to identify each child’s stage of development
and to distinguish the orthographic features that
students either already know or have no idea about.
Reading and writing provide the purpose and the
vehicle for learning about words, and words study
serves as the means for strengthening and advancing
students’ understanding of words so they can read
and write more fluently.
Stages of Spelling Development
Stage I: Emergent (Preliterate)
Stage II: Letter Name
Stage III: Within Word Pattern
Stage IV: Syllable Juncture
Stage V: Derivational Constancy
Jigsaw Reading
Stage I: Emergent Spelling (Preliterate); page
8-10
Stage II: Letter Name Spelling; page 10-13
Stage III: Within Word Pattern Spelling; page
13, 16 and 17
Stage IV: Syllable Juncture Spelling; page 17,
20 and 23
Assessment
All students begin with the Letter Name
assessment, no matter what grade level.
Each assessment is set up to test each one
of the features within the stage.
Beginning of the year use Form A for each of
the stages (as needed).
Give one assessment at a time.
Formation of Developmentally
Appropriate Groups
Groups must remain small. Three to four
groups is the typical number of groups.
On occasions, this may differ depending
on the class.
Once the developmental stage has been
identified for each student, the teacher
will need to identify the feature (within
the stage) to begin instruction.
5-
mastery of the feature
4
3-
strong understanding of the feature
2-
little knowledge of the feature
1-
limited knowledge of the feature
0-
no knowledge of the feature
some knowledge of the feature
Small Group Instruction
Refer to Word Journeys
Cycles are two weeks in length.
Activities are completed during the two week cycles
for guided practice.
Depending on the feature of study, instruction could
last for a long duration of time.
Remember, you want to lay a strong foundation with
each feature so that the children can continue to
build upon their knowledge.
Day One: Introducing the Sort
This day will take up more time than any of the other “word
study” days. Explicit instruction must occur on the start of
each exploration of new words.
Use a no-specials day
Introduce two groups on Monday and the other two on Tuesday.
All students will be ready to go for Day Two on Wednesday.
Have students cut out and initial the backs of their cards for
morning work on Day One
One white copy that stayed at school and one blue copy that
went home.
Three-S
Say
It
Spell
It
Sort
It
Summative (Formative Assessment)
Completed on the last day of the cycle.
Should incorporate words from the current sort, but must include
words that were NOT practiced in the sort. The new words will
follow the same word patterns that were practiced during the two
week cycle.
Be sure to tell the students and the parents about this upfront!! It
is not a secret or a trick!!
If the entire group did not master the sort, a new sort may need to
be created to repeat the cycle again. If a few students did not
master it, they will need to be pulled separately for remediation.
Begin with the next sort and start the two week cycle again.
Initial Implementation
Begin the school year by developing a strong classroom
culture.
Clearly going through each day of the cycle and modeling
exactly how you expect things to look, operate and run.
Modeling is the key to the success!!
Lead the class through two complete whole group cycles
before instructing small groups based on developmental
needs.
Small group instruction will most likely begin in early
October.