1 / 29

Stages of Reading and Writing

Stages of Reading and Writing. January 2011. Preschoolers and Literacy. Through exposure children construct concepts about literacy. They need repeated opportunities to: See spoken words in written form in order construct the relationship between oral and written language.

zarita
Download Presentation

Stages of Reading and Writing

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. Stages of Reading and Writing January 2011

  2. Preschoolers and Literacy • Through exposure children construct concepts about literacy. They need repeated opportunities to: • See spoken words in written form in order construct the relationship between oral and written language. • Explore books in order to: • distinguish pictures from print • Observe left to right and top to bottom progression of text • Understand function of letters in forming words.

  3. Phonemic Awareness vs. Phonetic Awareness • Phonemic Awareness- ability to recognize spoken words as a sequence of sounds • Phonetic Awareness- understanding of the relationship between letters (or group of letters)and their sounds. Eventually students make the transition to reading by recognizing certain words.

  4. The Process of Reading • From whole to the part. • Differentiate print from the rest of the page globally. • Distinguish words from the stream of writing. • Look at the parts of words in order as they form letter-sound relationships.

  5. Stages of Reading Students move through levels of reading as they gain reading fluency and become more adept at solving problems that appear in text. These levels can be grouped into four developmental stages of reading: • Emergent • Early • Developing • Fluent The guided reading lesson for each developmental stage differs in format and the skills that are targeted for development. The characteristics of the text also vary with the developmental level. The book levels and sources of predictability refer to those described by DeFord, Lyons and Pinnell (1991).

  6. Emergent Stage • Emergent stage readers are learning that text and illustrations work together to tell a story. The repetitive nature of the text and the clear matching of each illustration to the corresponding text enable students to make connections between what he or she says and what is written. Students may substitute words like mom for mother or cat for kitten, but the meaning remains the same.

  7. Target Skills for Emergent Readers • front and back of a book • title and title page • top and bottom of a page • where to begin on a page • left-to-right progression and return sweep • print contains meaning • word boundaries • first and last word • one-to-one correspondence (word match) • letter recognition • some initial consonant sounds • basic punctuation (period, question mark) • at least ten high frequency words

  8. Characteristics of books for Emergent Readers • a small amount of print per page • rhyme, rhythm, repetition, and natural language • illustrations that are clear and uncluttered and directly support the text • captions/phrases or short sentences • a consistent pattern of print placement • a cover and title page that are an integral part of the whole book • repetitive sequences that introduce simple one word changes at the end of each sequence • simple story beginnings, middles, and endings • surprise endings or twists on the story

  9. Early Stage • Early stage readers understand the basic concepts of print and are reedy for more complex stories. Students are beginning to use clues from illustrations, clues from letters/words, and meaning clues when reading unfamiliar text.

  10. Target Skills for Early Readers • solidifying knowledge of concepts of print (word/space, first/last word, one-to-one word match, and words/letter) • identifying at least twenty high frequency words • identifying and using initial consonants • recognizing basic punctuation marks • beginning to use reading strategies and cue systems

  11. Characteristics of books for Early Readers • an increasing amount of print per page within short and longer responses • dialogue mixed with prose in a variety of formats • text that may not correspond directly with illustrations • a varied pattern of print placement • illustrations give text support but are only a part of the story content • two or more sentence patterns • simple story lines with familiar experiences • simple concepts related to real world experience • increased vocabulary and text that may poise questions

  12. Developing Stage • Developing readers are beginning to achieve independence in reading by using multiple cueing systems and strategies. Students are building their sight vocabulary and their understanding of simple literacy elements of plot, character, setting and dialogue.

  13. Target Skills for Developing Readers • using picture clues as a means of cross-checking • reading on to gain meaning • using first and last consonants • increasing sight vocabulary • retelling stories • identifying punctuation marks • rereading for meaning • self-correcting • integrating strategies by using one strategy to cross-check another • inferring information from the text

  14. Characteristics of books for Developing Readers • increased amount of print with several paragraphs per page • more complex story lines • greater variety of words and more challenging and specialized vocabulary • more fully developed characters and plots • more complex language structures such as similes and metaphors • paragraphs instead of simple sentences • illustrations are less supportive of text and are intended to add more details and create story atmosphere • story lines involving different times and settings

  15. Fluent Stage • Fluent stage readers are able to read a variety of texts in an effective manner. Students are becoming involved in the text as they read and comprehend at a deeper level. Students are familiar with a variety of genre and are comfortable reading independently for extended periods of time.

  16. Target Skills for Fluent Readers • increased fluency at higher reading levels • able to read text independently • automatic recognition of known words • successful use and integration of reading strategies • an understanding of basic literary Early Stage • basic concepts of print • ready for more complex stories. • use clues from illustrations, clues from letters/words, and meaning clues when reading unfamiliar text. • solidifying knowledge of concepts of print (word/space, first/last word, one-to-one word match, and words/letter) • identifying at least twenty high frequency words • identifying and using initial consonants • recognizing basic punctuation marks • beginning to use reading strategies and cue systems

  17. Characteristics of books for Fluent Readers • an increasing amount of print per page with short and longer sentences • dialogue mixed with prose in a variety of formats • text that may not correspond directly with illustrations • a varied pattern of print placement • illustrations give text support but are only a part of the story content • two or more sentence patterns • simple story lines with familiar experiences • simple concepts related to real world experiences • increased vocabulary and text that may pose questions

  18. The stages of writing • Just as Reading progresses through a series of stages of increasing difficulty so does a child’s skills in writing. In order to progress into writing a child must be surrounded by meaningful writing.

  19. Scribbling • Scribbling is a child’s first attempt at reproducing writing. It is similar to the scribbling stage in art, but with more controlled marks. Think of scribbling as being similar to babbling in speech. Babbling allows children to explore the sounds of speech, scribbling allows them to explore with the visual appearance of writing.

  20. Linear/Repetitive Writing • Sometimes referred to as “personal cursive”, at this level children have refined their scribbling to look more like standard writing. Just like when a baby refines babbling by dropping the sounds that do not exist in their own language retaining only relevant sounds, children in this stage refine their own writing attempts to look more like real writing as they become more aware of how writing actually looks.

  21. Letter Like Forms Now children’s writing begins to become very similar to actual printing, in fact many of the marks start to look pretty close to actual letters. As they make the transition into the next stage teachers may observe letters and letter like forms intermingled in their writing.

  22. Letters and Early Word-Symbol Relationships • Children at this stage are beginning to reproduce letters and often use a single letter to represent and entire word. While the letters may not all by formed correctly , there may be a one to one correspondence between the number of words they represent This is similar to an early stage of speaking when children use a single word to represent entire thoughts, such as saying “out” for I want to go outside. At this stage the child indicates a clearer intent for the letters to represent specific words than in the previous stage.

  23. Invented Spelling Children in this stage of writing demonstrate quite clearly that they have constructed some letter sound relationships. The sounds children represent usually follow this order • Beginning consonants • More consonants added • Vowels While they may leave out some sounds or represent some sounds with the wrong letter, at this level students show a great deal of knowledge about the structure of words. Just like in speaking children progress to the point of making overgerneralizations in the rules of grammar, children at this stage may make phonics errors that show they understand the concepts.

  24. Standard Spelling • In this stage children have understood that words have a standard spelling. Even in preschool some children remember the spelling for some words like mom, dad, love, cat, or their names. • If a child feels he/she has a lot to say they may revert to an earlier stage of writing.

  25. Which stage is this sample from?

  26. How about this one?

  27. And this one??

  28. Take the samples of writing and in groups order them in the correct sequence according to how children develop writing skills.

  29. Thank you!

More Related