Elements of Reading Kaitlyn Jones For: Teacher’s Conference
Phonemic Awareness Understanding that speech is made up of individual sounds Foundation for phonics and spelling Enables children to use sound-symbol correspondences to read and spell words Has been shown to be the most powerful predictor of later reading achievement
Phonemic Awareness: Components of Phonemes Smallest units of speech Graphemes Letters of the alphabet
Phonemic Awareness: Strategies Identifying sounds in words Categorizing sounds in words Substituting sounds to make new words Blending sounds to form words Segmenting words into sounds Rhyming Elkonin Boxes
Phonemic Awareness: Activities Sound-matching activities Sound-isolation activities Sound-blending activities Sound-addition and –substitution activities Sound-segmentation activities
Phonics Set of relationships between phonology and orthography Explains relationships between phonemes and graphemes Not a stand-alone element, but helpful when used with other elements
Phonics: Strategies Multisensory phonics Matching books to phonics features
Fluency Ability to read quickly, accurately, and with expression Must recognize words automatically and be able to identify unfamiliar words easily 3 Components Automaticity Speed Prosody
Fluency: Strategies Using music Choral reading Reader’s theatre Shared Reading
Vocabulary Deeply related to comprehension Create a word-rich classroom Immerse students in works Pre-teach key words Build background knowledge
Vocabulary: Strategies List-Group-Label Possible sentences Semantic Feature Analysis Word Hunts Word Maps Word Walls
Text Comprehension Activate background knowledge Teach students how to make connections Text-to-self Text-to-world Text-to-text Teach students to determine importance Teach students to draw inferences
Text Comprehension: Strategies Literacy Circles QAR SWIT
Conclusion Which elements do you use most in your classroom? Which strategies do you use most in your classroom? How effective are the strategies you use? What can we do to make them more effective?
Refereneces Literacy for the 21 st Century, Gail E. Tompkins