1 / 12

Making Sense of Phonics

Making Sense of Phonics. Isabel Beck. Why are we teaching phonics?. Research has determined that successful readers rely primarily on the letter-sound correspondences and spelling patterns in words, rather than on context or pictures to identify familiar and unfamiliar words.

cicily
Download Presentation

Making Sense of Phonics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Making Sense of Phonics Isabel Beck

  2. Why are we teaching phonics? • Research has determined that successful readers rely primarily on the letter-sound correspondences and spelling patterns in words, rather than on context or pictures to identify familiar and unfamiliar words. • Systematic phonics instruction makes a bigger contribution to children’s growth in reading than non-systematic alternative programs or no phonics.

  3. Why Teach Phonics • Phonics helps all learners. • Good readers spell better with phonics instruction. • Many children, even good readers, read more effectively with explicit, systematic phonics instruction.

  4. Systematic Phonics • Systematic, not random: • Preplanned skill sequence • Progresses from easier sounds to more difficult sounds • High-utility sounds and letters taught first • Letters with similar shapes and sounds are separated • Vowels separated in sequence of alphabetic instruction

  5. Elements of a phonics lesson • Sound (Phonemic awareness) • Letter-sound association (often uses a card) • Blending/Word building • Reading decodable text • Application in other context

  6. What do you teach? Kindergarten • Basic Phonological Awareness • Consonant Sounds • Consonant Blends (Introduce) • Long and Short Vowels (Introduce) • PWIM

  7. What do you teach? 1st Grade • Long and Short Vowels • Consonant Digraphs (ch, th, sh, wh) • Consonant Blends • Vowel Digraphs (oi, oy, ew, etc.) • Silent e • R-Controlled Vowels • Irregular Vowel Teams

  8. What do you teach? 2nd Grade • Irregular Vowel Teams • Inflectional endings • Prefixes and Suffixes

  9. Principles of Good Phonics Instruction: 5 Components • Teacher explanations of the reading concept or strategy targeted for development and why it is useful • Teacher modeling and demonstrations of how the concept or strategy can be applied • Student opportunities for application and articulation of its use • Coaching through direct assistance to individual students and through the design of subsequent teacher • Explanations, models, and practice activities monitoring for application in real reading situations.

  10. Questions from the book… Ahas! • Phonemic awareness may be taking on more of a life of its own than is useful. • Students need to receive more intense decoding rather than phonemic awareness instruction. • Compared to a matched control group, children in the Word Building group made significantly greater progress on standardized tests of decoding, comprehension, and phonological awareness. • Show student the difference between what she read and what should have been read… let child immediately compare her response to correct response. • Adding vocabulary to children’s repertoires and scaffolding their ability to follow a complicated text should not be held back until their word recognition becomes adequate.

  11. Questions from the book… Next steps… • Create continuum of when to teach letter identification, word families, and blends. • Create progress monitoring to follow the word building activities. • Discuss successive blending and what that looks like. Demonstration… Reflection. • Create one-sheet script to follow for easy access.

  12. Resources Beck, I. L. (2006) Making Sense of Phonics. New York, New York: The Guilford Press Murley, C. (2010) Des Moines Public Schools Retrieved March 18, 2011 http://www.paec.org/teacher2teacher/phonics_notetaking_guide.pdf

More Related