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reading foundations 101

Published on Dec 02, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

reading foundations 101

introduction to phonemic awareness, phonics, and small group reading
Photo by paul goyette

AGENDA

  • Phonemic Awareness, Phonics, and Practicalities
  • Small Group Reading Notes

Phonological Awareness

  • Phonological awareness is the ability to hear sounds that make up words in spoken language
Phonological Awareness includes: Recognizing rhymes and words with the same beginning or ending sounds, knowing that sounds can be manipulated to create new words, and separating words into their individual sounds, as well as separating sentences into their individual words.

Phonological Awareness: Why?

  • "Readers must analyze words into sounds in order to make sense of print. This is the skill that promotes successful decoding." -Wagner, Torgesen, & Rashotte, 1994

Phonological Awareness: Why?

  • "Research indicates that, without direct instructional support, phonemic awareness eludes roughly 25% of middle-class first graders and substantially more of those who come from less literacy-rich backgrounds.” – Adams, et al., 1998

Phonological Awareness: Why?

  • “Poorly developed phonemic awareness distinguishes economically disadvantaged preschoolers…has been shown to be characteristic of adults with literacy problems in the United States.” – Adams, et. al. 1998

When

  • When: Intensively and to Mastery in Kindergarten and First Grade
  • Up to grade 5, per CCSS
  • Through 6th grade for strugglers

Phonics

  • Phonics is the learning of the relationship between phonemes and graphemes (letters).
Photo by Wayan Vota

Phonics: Why?

  • Phonics secures the crucial skills of word recognition and enables children to read fluently and automatically, thus freeing them to concentrate on the meaning of the text.
Photo by Wayan Vota

Phonics: Why?

  • Allows writers to express thoughts so others can understand (spelling!)
Photo by Wayan Vota

When

  • Intensively and to Mastery in K-5
  • Through 6th grade for struggling readers
Photo by Wayan Vota

Phonics

  • Some how-tos
Photo by Wayan Vota

Phonics

  • What about materials?
  • Files available on Google Drive
Photo by Wayan Vota

Small Group Reading

  • Small Group Reading is for teaching any component of reading to a few students who’ve been grouped based on a specific reading need
  • May address phonemic awareness, phonics, comprehension, or close reading skills

Small Group Reading: Why?

  • Benefits academic vocabulary and English development through practice (low affective load) and individualized feedback
  • Teach and practice reading skills to meet very specific needs
  • Flexible and needs-based grouping

When? Who?

  • All grades
  • To introduce, reinforce, and remediate reading concepts and skills
  • Below, at, and above grade level readers

Workstations/Centers/Task Lists

  • Must be focused on known skills
  • Introduce and teach how
  • Create perpetual stations to reduce the need to create and teach new tasks/procedures
Photo by hackNY

Workstations/centers/tasks

  • Phonics
  • Phonological awareness (primary)
  • Morphology: word parts, roots, affixes, syllabication (Nifty Thrifty Fifty)
  • Vocabulary

Workstations/centers/tasks

  • Fluency
  • Comprehension
  • Writing
  • Visual representation or interpretation

Workstations/centers/tasks

  • Google Classroom - Chavez Reading Champions

The Challenge

What is your reading vision for your students this year?
Photo by kBandara