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Welcome!. Please locate the table with your name…. Goals. Introduction: components of a balanced reading program Read Aloud Alphabet Recognition Introduction to Phonemic Awareness. A Balanced Reading Program. Read Aloud Shared Reading Guided Reading Independent Reading. Read Aloud. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Welcome!
Please locate the table with your name…
Goals• Introduction: components of a balanced
reading program
• Read Aloud
• Alphabet Recognition
• Introduction to Phonemic Awareness
A Balanced Reading Program
• Read Aloud
• Shared Reading
• Guided Reading
• Independent Reading
Read Aloud
• Text difficulty
• Control of text
• Model reading strategies
• Variety of genres
• Oral language development
• Text structure
Read Aloud
Take notice of what I do…
before
during
after.
Alphabet Recognition
The Z Was Zapped1. What words can you think of that begin with the letters of your
first name? Can you think of words that describe you?
2. What is an “act” in a play?
3. As I read, make the letters with your body.
4. Can you act out the letters?
5. Can you illustrate a letter?
6. Could we make our own innovation, and go through the same process?
http://www.hipark.austin.isd.tenet.edu/grade3/guenther/zapped/kids_site/z_was_zapped.htm
Alphabet Recognition
• Letter names
• Letter shapes or forms
• Letter sounds
Activities to Develop Alphabet Recognition
• Reading ABC books
• Singing songs with alphabet names
• Environmental print, including own name
• Playing, reading, and writing uppercase/lowercase letters
• Magnetic, foam, plastic, tracer letters
• Matching letters in words
Lesson Ideas
Assessing Alphabet Recognition
Letter Name Sound
A
S
M
U
E
N
C
P
Phonemic Awareness
• Phoneme
c/a/t vs. r/a/t
• Phonemic awareness
• Phonemic awareness vs. phonics
• Phonological awareness
Role of Phonemic Awareness
• Helps Ss understand…
Letters represent sounds in oral language
Blend to read words
Segment to spell
• Minimal level needed in order to benefit from phonics instruction
• Reading instruction
Developing Phonological Awareness
• Sequence:
- rhymes
- words
- syllables
- phonemes
Rhymes• Using nursery rhymes
– Recite in whispers, rhyming words loud.– Recite loudly, whisper rhyming words.– Recite in round.– Seated in circle, Ss recite successive lines, one at a time, in
turn.– Seated in a circle, Ss recite successive words, one at time, in
turn. Pease porridge hot!Pease porridge cold!
Pease porridge in the potNine days old.
Some like it hot,Some like it cold,
Some like it in the potNine days old!
Rhymes
• Using Movement– Pease Porridge Hot (cold/old, hot/pot)– One Potato, Two Potato (more, four)– Eeny Meeny Miney Mo (Mo, toe, go, Mo) – Baa, Baa Black Sheep (wool, full)– One, Two, Buckle My Shoe (two, shoe; four,
door; and so on)
Lesson Plans
• Introduction– Tap prior knowledge about concepts addressed– Tap prior experiences about content
• Procedure– Steps– Include classroom management issues, materials
use, time allotted to each step• Closure
– Connects back to introduction– What opportunities will you give students to inform
about what new conceptual and content understandings they have acquired?
For next time…
Language Arts Assignment 2:
Choose a nursery rhyme and another rhyming book. Write up some minilesson ideas for teaching phonemic awareness using these texts. Be prepared to share and hand in.
Bibliography
• An Observation Survey by Marie Clay (from last week)• I Am Absolutely Too Small for School by Lauren Child• Ape in a Cape by Fritz Eichenberg• Dr. Seuss’ ABC• Miss Spider’s ABC by David Kirk• A, My Name is Andrew by Mary McManus Burke, et al• Z Was Zapped by Chris Van Allsburg• A is for Salad by Mike Lester• Animalia by Graeme Base• Picture a Letter by Brad Sneed• Chicka Chicka Boom Boom by Bill Martin Jr., et al