Transcript Word study

Review questions for vocabulary
study
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What is the purpose of a big vocabulary?
Can you have a vocabulary lesson in
isolation?
What is best practice in teaching
vocabulary?
Give two examples of strategies for
teaching vocabulary.
Closing remarks
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Vocabulary is very important in reading
comprehension, yet primary schools often teach
children words they already know, hence not
pushing them far.
 Teach both high & low frequency words (eg.
Delicious, reluctant, etc).
 Many children who are able to decode by third
grade and are good readers fall behind from 3rd
grade. Why? Limited vocabulary.
 So what is the solution to this problem?
English language learners &
vocabulary
Average child enters 1st grade with a vocabulary
of 5000 words. For some ELLs this vocabulary is
0.
 With a vocabulary of 2000 one can understand
up to 90% of words in popular novels & 80% in
newspapers.
 Skills to focus on: direct instruction on high
frequency word knowledge, use of dictionary,
use lots of picture clues and other nonverbal
strategies.
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Sing in the tune of “Muffin Man”
Do You Know?
Do you know two rhyming words,
Two rhyming words,
Two rhyming words
Do you know two rhyming words,
The sound a lot alike
King and ring are two rhyming words
Two rhyming words
Two rhyming words
King and ring are two rhyming words
They sound a lot alike
(Replace king and ring with other rhyming words. Take turns to suggest
new words)
Terminologies
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Sight words.
onset
rime
DecodingCuing systems: Phonological (graphophonic),
syntactic, semantic,
Miscue
Phonograms
Short “e” versus long “e”. Give examples.
Compound words.
The scope of phonics instruction
and word study
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Alphabet knowledge- putting letters together to form
words (onset & rime), putting words together to form
sentences, developing automaticity in putting this words
together.
 Word analysis:
 Phonemic awareness- rhyming (matching sound with
sight)
 Word study: (requires both auditory and visual input)Blending, segmenting, alphabetic knowledge.
 Using decoding to read words familiar and non familiar.
Question:
Is it necessary to use silly words in
helping children develop phonemic
awareness and rhyming?
Teaching the alphabet
 What
sequence do you fall in teaching the
alphabet? Alphabetic, names of children,
vowels vs consonants?
What steps do you follow when
teaching the alphabet?
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Start with letter names, use classic songs (be ware of
“elemeno” problem)
 (Many children can recite by age 4, but do not know the
corresponding shapes)
 Next shapes & sounds.
 Teach children to see differences in letters, eg, m-w, d-b,
i-l, g-p, b-q, but after they have mastered one of them.
 Provide letter-writing opportunities- this is key, especially
independent writing.
 Include multisensory activities, several alphabet books,
& key words and pictures to provide multiple clues.
Phonics?
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The main argument:
 It helps children decode words (provides more
opportunities) therefore better chances to
recognize wordssoon become fluent
readersthis improves reading comprehension
 since they are not struggling with decoding
words they can devote their mental energies on
making meaning from the text).
Curious research finding
 Beyond
a certain point there is a negative
relationship between amount of time spent
on phonics and reading achievement.
 What could the reason be????
Phoncis (3 golden rules according
to research supporting it:
 Do
it early
 Keep it simple
 Complete instruction by the end of second
grade-3rd grade (except for cases of
diagnosed individual needs.
Phonics & word study approaches:
struggling readers
About a 3rd of kindergarten children come to school with
no phonemic awareness.
 These children are likely to struggle for a while and need
more explicit approaches.
 Grouping and individualized attention helps.
 One must try to identify the actual challenge they are
encountering (through testing, miscue analysis,
vocabulary analysis (give assessment tool).
 Remember word recognition is basic in reading and
problems assessment has to start there.
 Make it fun and contextualized.
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