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Foundational Skills
• Print Concepts• Phonological Awareness• Phonics and Word Recognition• Fluency
CCSS, pages 15-17
Standard 4a Instruction
*Use on-level text to make predictions beforereading*Check predictions after reading*Monitor comprehension before, during, andafter reading*Ask and answer questions*Summarize a text
Standard 4b Instruction
*Partner read*Reread phrases and prose*Decode grade-level multisyllabic words*Read grade-level sight words accurately and automatically*Read with expression
Standard 4c Instruction
*Use effective strategy to decode unfamiliar words*Use effective strategy to determine meaning of unfamiliar words (roots, affixes)*Use context to confirm pronunciation (present-a gift; present-to introduce) and meaning
Standard 3a Instruction
*Know meanings of common prefixes and suffixes and understand how they change the meaning of words*Know meaning of common roots*Use knowledge of affixes and roots to decodewords in and out of context*Use effective strategy to decode multisyllabic words
Instruction for Third Grade
*Standard 3b Decode common Latin suffixes
*Standard 3c Use strategy to decode using syllabication rules and morphemes
*Standard 3d Know and read phonemic and morphemic spelling patterns
Definition of Fluency
“Fluency is the ability to read a text accurately and quickly. When fluent readers read silently, they recognize words automatically. They group words quickly in ways that help them gain meaning from what is read. Fluent readers read aloud effortlessly and with expression. Their reading sounds natural, as if they are speaking.” (Armbruster, Lehr, & Osborn, 2001, p. 22)
Factors that Affect Fluency
• Ich liebe Hunde. Ich liebe Katzen. Ich liebe, über Hunde und Katzen zu lesen.
• Ich liebe Hunde. Ich liebe Katzen. Ich liebe, über Hunde und Katzen zu lesen.
• I love dogs. I love cats. I love to read about dogs and cats.
Factors that Affect Fluency• Since H2O is a suitable sink for these acids, all such acids will lose protons
to H2O in aqueous solutions. These are therefore all strong acids that are 100% dissociated in aqueous solution; this total dissociation reflects the very large equilibrium constants that are associated with any reaction that undergoes a fall in free energy of more than a few kilojoules per mole.
• This planet is the only known planet to harbor life. The oceans on this planet cover nearly 70 percent of its surface. It is the third planet in order from the Sun, and is about 150 million kilometers from the Sun.
Why is Fluency So Important?
• Poor fluency affects you in a variety of ways. • Why would these comments concern you?
– “I don’t like reading. It takes me too long to read something.”– “Reading through this book takes so much of my energy, I can’t even
think about what it means.”– “She reads a book with no expression.”– “He stumbles a lot and loses his place when reading something aloud.” – “She reads like a robot.”
Fluent vs. Non-Fluent ReadersIdentify words accurately and automatically which focuses attention on comprehension
Connections are more easily made between the text and themselves
Difficulty in consistently identifying words rapidly
Read word-by-word which makes the reading sound choppy
Group words in unnatural ways
Find more difficulty making text connections
An Effective Method of Teaching Fluency: Rhyming
Peas porridge hotPeas porridge coldPeas porridge in the potFive days old
• Introduces a variety of word families which can later be used to decode words
• It allows students to hear and see parts of words which they may see later in a book they are reading
• Helps children develop an ear for our language. Rhyme and rhythm highlight the sounds and syllables in words.
Understanding and Assessing Fluency
• Why is it critical to make sure that students have sufficient fluency?
• How should you assess fluency?
http://www.readingrockets.org/article/27091/
Fluency Assessments
“Because reading is so critical to success in and out of school and because many students struggle with fluent reading, fluency should be assessed often. Effective fluency assessments provide information that will guide instruction and improve student outcomes” (Hosp, Hosp, and Howell 2007).
TFR, p. 199
Choral Reading
• is reading aloud in unison with a whole class or group of students• helps build students' fluency, self-confidence, and motivation.
http://www.readingrockets.org/strategies/choral_reading/
Paired Reading
• students read aloud to each other • fluent readers can be paired with less fluent readers• children who read at the same level can reread a
story they have previously read.
Reader's Theater
• it involves children in oral reading through reading parts in scripts
• students do not need to memorize their part; they need only to reread it several times
http://www.readingrockets.org/strategies/readers_theater/
Tape Assisted Reading
• is an individual or group reading activity• students read along in their books as they
hear a fluent reader read the book on an audiotape.
Fluency Strategies•How would you work these strategies into your daily classroom reading routines?•Would you teach these strategies whole group or small group? Why?•How do these strategies relate to the CCSS Foundational Skills Standard 4?
Decoding
• The language of any people is the sound system by which the individuals communicate with one another. The written language is merely a system of symbols, a code, used to represent the spoken language.
• One of the basic steps in the reading process is translating the code into the sounds of the spoken language.
Phoneme
A phoneme is the smallest unit of sound that distinguishes one word from another.
pin pin pin pintin pen pit chin
The symbol / / encloses a represented phoneme.
Grapheme
A grapheme is a symbol that represents a sound.
A grapheme and a letter are not synonymous.
What letters form the final grapheme in the word wash?
Write the Phoneme
Use the / / symbol to write the individual phonemes for the following words:pan
milk
sense
laugh
Phonics Quiz
• How many letters are contained in our alphabet?
• How many consonant letters have distinct phonemes?
Word Study
• Letter Name (consonants, short vowels, consonant blends and digraphs)
• Within Word (vowel patterns)• Syllables and Affixes (Doubling, unaccented
syllables)• Derivational Relations (Greek and Latin,
suffixes, vowel alternations)
Prefixes
Graves recommends that teachers provide explicit instruction in the most frequently used prefixes. White, Sowell, and Yanagihara suggest teaching prefixes in the order of their frequency. These researchers found that twenty prefixes account for about 97 percent of the prefixed words in printed school English. Four prefixes (un-, re-, in- and dis-) account for about 58 percent of prefixed words.
Suffixes
The essential function of a suffix is to indicate the part of speech of a particular word. When it comes to understanding what a word means, the suffix is the least important component.
Inflectional: s, es, ed, ingDerivational: ful, less
Only a few suffixes merit intensive scrutiny.
Rasinski, Padak, Newton, and Newton (2008)
Limitations
• Some prefixes are not consistent in meaning.• Sometimes the removal of what appears to be
a prefix leaves no meaningful root word.• Sometimes the removal of what appears to be
a prefix or a suffix leaves a word that is not obviously related in meaning to the whole word.
“The identification of syllables and how they join together becomes very important to students in about third grade, when they must independently decode words of greater length. If they are not taught to perceive the larger chunks of written words and to associate vowel pronunciation with syllable structure, they will be quite stymied by longer words encountered in reading. If they are aware of syllable units and where to divide them, however, they can read words such as detective, insulation, and accomplishment with no trouble.”
Speech to Print, page 100-01. GRW, p. 8
Research
• Students who read single-syllable words often have difficulty with multisyllabic words (Just and Carpenter 1987).
• Skilled readers’ ability to recognize a long word depends on whether they can chunk it into syllables in the course of perceiving it.” (Adams 1990)
• Less skilled readers need to be taught how to chunk words. (Beck, 2006)
Six Syllable PatternsSyllable Patterns Word Description
Closed SyllableVC, CVC
catcast
•Ends in at least one consonant•The vowel is short
Open SyllableCV
no by
•Ends in one vowel•The vowel is long
Vowel Consonant eVCe, CVCe
IceCake
•Ends in 1 vowel, 1 consonant, and final e•The final e is silent•The vowel is long
Six Syllable Patterns, continuedSyllable Patterns Word Description
Vowel rVr
Star •Has an r after the vowel•The vowel makes an unexpected sound
Vowel Team readread
•Has 2 adjacent vowels•Each vowel team must be learned individually
Final Stable applenation
•Has final consonant le combination or•Has non-phonetic reliable unit (-tion = /shun/)
CCSS, Appendix A, p. 21
Generalizations for Word Division:
1. Every syllable must have a vowel sound.2. A prefix or suffix is a separate syllable.3. Certain letter combinations at the end of words form a
final stable syllable.4. Locate vowels. 5. Vowel teams, digraphs, or diphthongs should not be
separated into different syllables. In all other instances, try dividing between the vowels.
6. When two consonants are found between two vowels, the word is divided between the two consonants.
CCSS Appendix A, pp. 21-22
Generalizations, cont.
7. When one consonant is located between two vowels, the consonant is usually attached to the second syllable making the first vowel sound long.
8. When that doesn’t work, divide after the consonant and give the vowel the short sound.
Decoding Multisyllabic Words
Multisyllabic Words
lawyer basketballcompute
nation
ClosedVC or CVC
OpenCV
Silent eVCe
Vowel Team
RControlled
Final Stable Syllable
Prompts for solving Multisyllabic Words
• What do you know that might help?• Where is the tricky part of the word?• What could you try?• Do you see a part that might help?• Try it another way.• Look for a part you know.• Look at the prefix/suffix• Use the generalization chart
Five Aspects of Word Knowledge:
1. Incrementality2. Multidimensionality3. Polysemy4. Interrelatedness5. Heterogeneity
43
Definitions
• Morpheme: smallest unit of language that carries meaning…..Bound: cannot stand alone as a wordFree: can stand alone as a word
• Root: basic part of word that carries meaning • Affix: morpheme that changes the meaning or
function of a root to which it is attached• Base word: word to which affixes may be
added: cannot be broken into smaller parts
Morphology/Word Study
vertebrates invertebrateskingdom extinct Passerine hemispherenon-passerine unlikeflightless endangeredtropical ornithologistlightweight warmthprotection zoologistreplacement preywetlands backward
The “Roots Advantage”
Fifth graders encounter 10,000 new words each year in their reading alone.
Fortunately, 4,000 of those new words are derivatives of familiar words, most of them of Greek or Latin origin.
Greek and Latin Roots• A word root is a word part that means
something. When a root appears inside a word, it lends its meaning to the word and helps create the word’s meaning.
• Words that contain the same root also share meaning. We call these cognates.
• The root conveys sound and meaning.Teaching the meaning of roots equips students
to expand their vocabularies.
Greek and Latin Roots
• Greek: Related to math and science (astro, geo)
• Latin: General purpose (struct, spect)
Vocabulary Practice• Word Theater (Partners select a word from a
list and have two minutes to act it out)• Word Skit (Teams select a word, write its
definition, create a situation to show the meaning)
• Wordo (Students write words in boxes on a card and x-out as clue is given such as synonym, definition, read in sentence)
• Concentration (Prefix, Suffix, Root)
Word Spokes Activity
Cur
Cursive Writing
Computer Cursor
River Current
Current EventsCurrency
Incur Debt
Concur
The Vocabulary Strategy
• Look for Context Clues in the words, phrases and sentences surrounding the word
• Look for Word-Part CluesTry to break the word into parts.
Look at the root word. What does it mean?Look at the prefix. What does it mean?Look at the suffix. What does it mean?Put the meanings of the word parts together.
• Guess the Word’s Meaning• Try out the meaning in the original sentence• Use the dictionary, if necessary, to confirm your meaning.
Websites for Students
• http://www.edhelper.com• http://www.wordexplorations.com• http://www.lexfiles.info• http://www.vocabulary.com
Websites for Teachers• http://ww.virtualsalt.com/roots.htm• http://www.awrsd.org/oak/Library/greek_and
_latin_root_words.htm• http://www.allwords.com• http://www.wordorigins.org• http://www.funbrain.com/detect• http://www.varietygames.com/CW• http://www.wordexplorations.com