chapter seven assessing and teaching reading: phonological awareness, phonics, and word recognition

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CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

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Page 1: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

CHAPTER SEVENASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL

AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Page 2: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Chapter Overview

Reading and writing should be taught in such a way that each complements and supports the

other.

Page 3: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Concepts that Guide Reading Instruction

Reading is a skilled and strategic process in which learning to decode and read words accurately and rapidly is essential.

Reading entails understanding the text and depends on active engagement and interpretation by the reader.

Page 4: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Definitions Phonological awareness: Knowing

and demonstrating that spoken can be broken down into smaller units (words, syllables, phonemes)

Spelling

Page 5: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Definitions

Phonemic awareness: The ability to recognize the smallest sound units of spoken language and how these units of sound, or phonemes, can be separated (pulled apart or segmented), blended (put back together), and manipulated (added, deleted, and substituted).

Page 6: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Definitions

Phoneme: The smallest sound in spoken language that makes a difference in words. For instructional purposes related to reading, a phoneme is a single sound that maps to print – sometimes to one letter and sometime to more than one letter.

Page 7: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Definitions Phonics: The way in which sounds

of our language (not the letters) map to print. It is knowing how letter names and sounds relate to each other (i.e., letter-sound correspondence).

Page 8: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Continuum for the Development of Phonological

Awareness

Early Developing to Later Developing 1. Rhyme/alliteration 2. Sentence segmentation 3. Syllable blending and segmentation 4. Onset-rime blending and

segmentation 5. Phoneme blending, segmentation, and

manipulations

Page 9: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Teaching Phonological Awareness and Phonics

The majority of students at risk for reading difficulties have poor phonological awareness and can profit from explicit instruction in blending, segmenting, and manipulating sounds and mapping these sounds to letters as quickly as possible.

Page 10: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Response to Intervention and Progress Monitoring

(RTI) and progress monitoring must be coordinated in the early grades to address phonological awareness and phonics.

Page 11: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Are Students Responding to Instruction in Phonemic Awareness

and Phonics?It’s all about the data.

Reading instruction? How do these students perform compared to other

students in the class? Have students with low phonemic awareness received

instructional opportunities in small groups? Is progress monitoring data available to show the

student’s progress?

Page 12: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Progress Monitoring Determine students’ performance in

phonemic awareness, phonics, word reading. Then, design an effective intervention program.

Assessments Diagnostic assessments Norm-based assessments Progress monitoring assessment Curriculum-based measures

Page 13: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Teaching Letter-Sound Correspondences

The number of speech sounds or phonemes in English vary from 40 to 52.

For purposes of teaching students, most estimates are about 44. (Fromkin and

Rodman, 1998; Owens, 2010)

In learning to read and write, students learn more than 100 spellings (graphemes) for these phonemes.

Page 14: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Teaching Letter-Sound Correspondences (continued)

Phonemes are divided into consonants (C) or vowels (V).

The English language also makes use of consonant digraphs and consonant blends. Consonant digraph – two consonants

that represent one sound (ph for /f/) Consonant blend – combines the sounds

of two or more consonants so that they are clustered together.

Page 15: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Guidelines for Teaching Letter-Sound

Correspondences

Students use letter-sound correspondences to decode words.

Struggling readers benefit from learning to blend and segment sounds so that they can decode and spell words.

A number of programs have been developed using systematic approaches to introduce the letter-sound relationships and how to blend sounds to read words.

Page 16: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Family Participation in Beginning Reading

Demonstrating some of the activities that family members can do at home and encourage them to engage children in fun and meaningful activities that improve reading.

This should be distributed on Open School Night

Page 17: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION
Page 18: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Word Recognition1. Decoding Strategies

Decoding strategies for identifying words: Phonic analysis Onset-rime

Page 19: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Synthetic phonics Teaching students explicitly to convert letters

into sounds (phonemes) and then blend the sounds to form recognizable words.

Analytic phonics Teaching students to analyze letter-sound

relations in previously learned words to avoid pronouncing sounds in isolation.

Page 20: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Structural analysis Syllabication Automatic word recognition Syntax and semantics

Page 21: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Teaching Phonics, Word Recognition, and Word Study

In beginning to work with students who have limited sight words and word identification strategies, it is helpful not only to determine the students’ current strategies, but also to determine what instructional approaches have been used previously, how consistently, for how long, and with what success.

Page 22: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Teaching Phonics, Word Recognition, and Word Study

Explicit code instruction approaches should be a part of a balanced reading approach for most students with special needs.

phonological awareness word identification strategies that rely on using

phonics, onset-rime, and structural analysis

Page 23: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Explicit Code Instruction

Explicit code approaches teach phonological awareness, letter-sound correspondences, the alphabetic principle, and the use of phonic analysis, structural analysis, and syllabication to decode unknown words.

Page 24: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Explicit Code Instruction (continued)

3 instructional features: Systematic instruction of letter–sound

correspondences and teaching students to blend the sounds to make words and segment sounds to spell words

Scaffolded instruction so that modeling, guidance, and positive and corrective feedback are integral features of instruction

Multiple opportunities for practice and review in various contexts (e.g., games with words cards, constructing sentences, reading texts)

Page 25: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Linguistic Approach: Onset-Rime and Word Families

The linguistic approach uses controlled text and word families (onset-rimes, phonograms, or spelling patterns) such as -at, -ight, and -ent to teach word recognition. This approach is particularly useful for students with reading problems.

Page 26: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

English Language Learners and Reading Difficulties

Good readers—whether they are monolingual English or English language learners—rely primarily on decoding words (understanding the sound to print correspondence or alphabetic principle).

They do not rely primarily on context or pictures to identify words. When they use context it is to confirm word reading or to better understand text meaning.

Page 27: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

English Language Learners and Reading Difficulties

Well-developed phonics instruction helps ELLs develop the skills and strategies they need to establish a map for making sense of how English language works in print.

As with monolingual students, phonics instruction is a piece of the reading instruction, not the entire program. Good phonics instruction is well integrated into language activities, story time, and small group support to create a balanced reading program.

Page 28: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Multisensory Structured Language Instruction

Multisensory structured language programs combine

explicit teaching of phonemic awareness, the alphabetic principle, phonics and structural analysis, syllabication, and decoding with activities that incorporate

the visual, auditory, tactile (touch), and

kinesthetic (movement) (VAKT) modalities.

Page 29: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

www.readingrockets.org/article/3409/

Page 30: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

High Frequency Words

Dolch List

Page 31: CHAPTER SEVEN ASSESSING AND TEACHING READING: PHONOLOGICAL AWARENESS, PHONICS, AND WORD RECOGNITION

Teaching Sight Words in Context

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yZwYU5vGcY

List the sequence of steps you would follow to use this method to teach sight words in context.