Jacari Workshop MT 2009: Teaching Spelling. Workshop outline Why teach spelling? How do we learn to spell? Phonological awareness (letter sounds Patterns.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Letters and Sounds.
Advertisements

Helping Your Child Learn to Read
A phonics workshop for Parents St John’s CE Primary School Tuesday 20 th November 2012 EYFS and KS1 team.
PHONICS The teaching of Phonics and Spelling at Fountains Earth Primary School.
Isabella State School Jolly Phonics Information Session.
Stages of Literacy Ros Lugg. Beginning readers in the USA Looked at predictors of reading success or failure Pre-readers aged 3-5 yrs Looked at variety.
What are the aims? Increase parental understanding of reading at Reception level Support children’s progress Learn various techniques to aid development.
Developing Active Readers Everyday D.A.R.E
Reading at St Joseph’s. Aims of today To explain how we teach reading. To introduce Read, Write, Inc. Sample ‘Speed sound’ session. To share some practical.
Teaching Reading... Workshop Michaelmas 2009
Jacari Teaching Workshop Key Stage 4 1 st March 2010.
Communication, Language and Literacy
Phonics. What is Phonics? Phonics is a strategy for teaching children how to read. Phonics is a strategy for teaching children how to read. Teaching children.
Phonics. Letters and sounds is a six phase teaching programme which starts from Nursery and continues to be taught primarily within Key Stage 1 and within.
Year One Parents’ Meeting. March 2015
Reading and Writing at the age of 4 and 5! Reading EYFS 2014 It is a big ask but it is a challenge that most children rise to! They are all going to learn.
Beginning to read.
Aims of session Making reading fun Early reading Developing reading
Supporting your child with reading.
Spelling Belle Vale School Improvement Liverpool 9 th May Sarah Williams.
Information for Parents November 2011 Welcome
Phonic Learning: a presentation for parents 17 th September 2015 Philippa Bromley.
Can we do exams? Yes we can! Exam preparation and digital resources Ushapa Fortescue Moscow, Russia October 2012.
Letters and Sounds. Introduction Children learn a great deal from other people. As parents and carers, you are your child’s first teachers. You have a.
LITERACY READING. By the end of the Reception Year children are expected to reach 17 Early Learning Goals. The Early Learning Goal for Reading: Children.
Finding Out About Phonics Holy Trinity CE Primary, Sunningdale.
Year 1 Reading & Phonics meeting
+ Phonics Workshop Tuesday 20 th October Phonics at Little Melton Primary In school, we follow the Letters and Sounds phonics programme. Letters.
East Farleigh Primary School Phonics Information Meeting 19/10/15.
Literacy Matters at West Hove Infant School Reading and Phonics Learning at home and at school -The Reception Year-
Reception reading meeting A quick guide. Aims of the meeting To demonstrate the different skills children build when learning to read. To show you how.
How you can help your child at home Presentation given on
Letters and Sounds at Abbeywood Learning Phonics Together A Guide for Parents.
Tips to help you learn your spellings
Literacy in Reception Reading ELG: Children read and understand simple sentences. They use phonic knowledge to decode regular words and read them aloud.
SPELLING AND PHONICS Throughout Year 2. VOCABULARY We use the correct terminology with the children right from reception. It may sound complicated but.
Enrichment Programme Structure What really happens in Te Whare Poipoi?
Welcome to our Phonics Information Session. What is phonics? Children are taught to read by breaking down words into separate sounds or ‘phonemes’. They.
KS1 Spelling and Phonics Workshop Debden 27th November 2015
Phonics Welcome. Please help yourself to refreshments.
Reading. What are the aims? Increase parental understanding of reading at Reception level Support children’s progress Learn various techniques to aid.
Basic Skills Evening Miss Scott-1,2,3 Team Leader Mrs Hehir- Maths Subject Leader.
Madginford Primary School Supporting Spelling Y5 & 6 Wednesday 4th February 2015.
Madginford Primary School
Spelling Workshop for Reception and Key Stage 1 Monday 14 th September 2015.
Phonics. At Elworth we use Read, write inc to teach your child phonics. This is a programme for children learning to read. It enables every child to become.
Phonics in the Foundation Stage. Phonics is... Phonics is a method for teaching reading and writing of the English language by developing learners' phonetic.
Helping your child to read. Presentation to Nursery and Reception Parents and Carers. October 2014 St. Michael’s Primary School.
Linguistic Phonics Coordinator’s Training Pack 2.
Children begin to learn phonics in Early Years, both nursery and reception. Once children begin learning phonics, they use this to read and spell words.
SPELLING. Learning spelling patterns & rules can be a chore With the right resources it can be seen as fun Spelling booklets are arranged in Year by Year;
Welcome to Priory Rise Phonic workshop 6 th November.
Foundation Stage Reading Meeting Monday 28th September 2015.
Phonics teaching at Meadow Vale Thursday 22nd September 2011.
Teaching children to read – through Phonics 23 rd September 2014.
The children in year 1 will focus on the use of phonics and decoding skills to support their reading progress. Phonic sounds are taught each week and.
Literacy Fiction Non-Fiction Poetry. Speaking Listening and responding Group discussion and interaction Drama Word recognition Word structure and spelling.
Phonics and Reading Workshop for Year 1 Parents Tuesday 8 th December 2015.
An introduction to phonics How to support your child with learning letters and sounds by K Laidler.
Parents meeting Phonic Awareness.
Phonics in Year 2 October Our aim today:  To help you gain an insight into how we teach phonics.  To help you gain some ideas about how you can.
Thursday 15 th January   Phonics involves breaking words into separate phonemes that can be blended together to read a word.   It teaches children.
Developing Phonics.
Phonics at Chawton CE Primary School
Year 2 Stay and Play!.
Phonics Screening Meeting
Parents, Children and Teachers Working Together
What is Phonics? November 2016.
Phonics and spelling KS1
KS1 Phonics 13th February 2019.
Presentation transcript:

Jacari Workshop MT 2009: Teaching Spelling

Workshop outline Why teach spelling? How do we learn to spell? Phonological awareness (letter sounds Patterns (not rules!) Familiarisation and high frequency words Checking spelling Setting targets Resources

I kn spel eny wey I lyk… Why teach spelling? Ensures accuracy of communication Boosts confidence Encourages writing fluency Helps with reading Rewards / exams / career plans Integral part of English language!

How do we “know” how to spell a word? "I listen to the sounds of the word in my head.” a "I write a list of the possible spellings and choose the one I think looks right." v "I try to think of a spelling rule." l "I break the word into bits and say their sound." a "I know the word because I've read it and written it so many times." v/l "I see the word inside my head." v "I link to other words that are in it or related to it." v/l "I say the word aloud." a "I look the word up in a dictionary." l "I find it just comes." l

How are these methods of spelling achieved? auditory: developing phonological awareness learning: developing understanding of patterns in spelling visual: developing familiarity with and recognition of words This is not necessarily a sequential progression! In supporting your pupil with spelling you will find it useful to work on all of these areas.

Phonological awareness: understanding letter sounds How written letters correspond to audible sounds (graphemes to phonemes) Goes hand-in-hand with reading (decoding/encoding) You are not expected to teach this from scratch But you may find that you need to support your child in this and it is worth knowing the systems they have been taught Revision in short, frequent sessions really helps! (Include in every lesson as a warm-up if at this stage.) Also, note that accent and knowledge of letters in another language may cause confusion and require extra work

Phonics in action: how to read the word “cat” See the word (eyesight) See it is made of three different letters (visual perception) Link the three letters to three sounds (visual -auditory memory link) Blend the sounds (sequence in order to convert to whole word) Say the word and understand the meaning (vocabulary)

…And in reverse: how to spell the word “cat” Know the meaning of the word to be communicated (vocabulary: "sense" cat to "word" cat) Say the word as a whole (whole word to component sounds) Break word into three component sounds Link three sounds to three letters (auditory- visual memory link) Write down three letters and see word (eyesight)

Multisensory activities for teaching single sounds Visual: see letter, colour in, write in different colours, big/small Auditory: say sound, repeat in different voices/pitches, discuss what the sound is like (ssssnake!) Kinaesthetic: link an action to the sound, e.g. rub tummy for "mmm", tap table for "t", snake movement for "sss“ You write here + say sound Child copies and says sound Cover top line, child writes + says sound Child writes with eyes closed

Ways to practise phonics-based spelling Reception activity: use letter cards or tiles (make these with your pupil) - say a word, then ask to find the letters to spell it. Then act out the word (e.g. cat, dog, wind) Year 1 activity: magic spells: similar resources, spell "cat", then say, "can you turn this cat into a 'rat' (mat/flat/etc)?" Don't forget a magic wand! The programme for teaching phonics is "Letters and Sounds", covered from reception to Year 1. (Resource 1) Many many worksheets are available! (Resource 2)

The problem with English… The issues: Some graphemes (written letters or combinations of letters) can be pronounced as a number of different phonemes (sounds), e.g. written "c" could be pronounced "s" or "c"; written "ough" is pronounced "off", "uff", "ow", "oo"... This is what makes reading English difficult! Some phonemes (sounds) can be written using a number of different graphemes (letters or combinations): e.g. "s" sound could be written "ss", "s", "c"; "oo" could be written "oo", "u-e", "ue", "ou", "ough", "ew"... This is what makes spelling in English difficult! (especially vowels: 5 letters but 20 sounds)

The solution… This is where it is necessary to start recognising, understanding and learning the patterns of spelling. There are absolutely loads of patterns to think about, teach, and practise. They may concern "silent letters", plurals, vowel placement, endings ("write" -> "writing" or "written")... There is not a finite list. Grouping by patterns may last the entire school career of a pupil. BUT there is a good summary! (Resource 3)

Which patterns to teach? Your pupil may have a list of spelling words each week from school, organised by patterns. If so, develop activities with these words. Or use your own. e.g., for "k"-sound words, provide a mixture of those spelled "c" and "cc" one week, and "ck" and "k" the next. See "Support for Spelling" (Resource 4) or "Teaching for progression: teaching spelling" (Resource 5) for indication of patterns taught and expected at particular levels. Talk about the pattern that occurs here: brainstorm examples and make a table / poster to show differences. Then use activities for practising.

Activities for practising Look, cover, write, check method... with modifications: can you write it in mirror writing? Can you write it upside down? Can you write it as small as possible? Can you write it in someone else's handwriting? Make up a wordsearch or crossword together, or a picture containing the words. Timed challenges: Pupil writes as many words that you read aloud as possible, in a given time. Use a "points" system: The number of correct words equates to the number of minutes spent playing a game at the end of the lesson. Combine spelling with a game you know your pupil enjoys: Snakes and Ladders, Bingo, Hangman, Top Trumps... Worksheets and prepared activities (see library and Resources 6 to 7.)

From using patterns to "just knowing" Of course, we do not become familiar with words just by thinking about and learning patterns. "High frequency words" are words that are used so commonly in English that they will become accessible not by sounds or patterning, but by unconscious memory (think of the, was, little) But to get to this stage, some more conscious memory will have to be involved!

Approaches List of high frequency words in Resource 4. Use similar methods as with patterns-based words. Mnemonics: it is "necessary" to have one collar and two sleeves… Big Elephants Can Always Use Small Elephants Reading and writing: practice makes perfect! Reading (reading, reading, reading!) : check against list of high frequency words to show just how high that frequency is! Writing: keep list of words at hand for quick reference.

More “just knowing”: homophones Homophones are words that sound the same but are written differently: there, they're, their; two, to, too; sew, so, sow Take a few of these groups at a time and discuss the differences in meaning. Try to establish a link between meaning differences and spelling differences. E.g. THERE has a similar structure to "here" and "where": all relate to places THEIR is the only one to end like "her" - both relate to possession THEY'RE: apostrophe shows that a letter is missing - relate to "they are" Draw funny pictures: pair of pears; a poor cat using his paw to pour... Then write sentences using as many as possible.

Checking spelling Of course, you do not want to discourage your pupil by pointing out spelling mistakes in everything they write! Ask them to check first, with a dictionary or list of words. Choose a certain pattern for the pupil or you to check (e.g. plurals, -ing words, -ould words) and focus on those. Choose a certain number of errors to concentrate on. Always point out the good bits!

Self-check investigation My wordMy spell checkI omitted or added a letter I spelt it as it sounds I used the wrong homophone I forgot / used the wrong spelling pattern atakedattackedxxx jumptjumpedxx theirtherexx

Setting spelling targets Specific Measurable Achievable Relevant Timed e.g. not "improve at spelling regular words", but "be able to spell phonetic words in the form CVC by the end of term" or "get at least 16/20 in a test on -able / -ible words in two weeks' time"

In conclusion… Work on phonics-based spelling if your pupil is still not sure about letters and sounds Then work on patterns and high frequency words in combination KEEP READING AND WRITING!