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Spelling… getting it write, wright, right. Adapted from southglos. gov
Spelling… getting it write, wright, right! Adapted from southglos.gov.uk
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Aims To know the implications for spelling within the primary curriculum To understand how spelling is being taught in school and what is considered to be good practise To have the opportunity to ask questions To know how you can support spelling at home
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Task In a puiltacibon of teh New Scnieitst it siad you cuold jublme all teh letetrs in a wrod adn as lnog as teh frist adn lsat were the smae, reibadailty wolud hadrly be aftcfeed. My ansaylis did not cmoe to mcuh beucase of teh thoery at the tmie but raserceh sugsegts we may hvae smoe pofrweul palrlael prsooscers at wrok, which seepd up regnicoiton. We olny need the frist and lsat letetrs to spot chganes in meniang.
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Spelling is a mental process To support children well, we need to be aware of the mental processes involved Say the word Visual memory of the word The feeling of correctness Correct spelling
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New Curriculum Expectations
Significant increase in expectations across all year groups Greater focus on spelling rules and conventions Greater focus on word roots and origins Word lists are particularly demanding Skills need to be embedded
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Working towards…
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Spelling Tests alone: Problems
Children rarely commit spellings learnt for a test to their long-term memory Some get 10/10 but then fail to spell these words correctly in their writing Can lead to poor self-esteem for children who practice but then don’t get many correct Gives teachers little information about the spelling skills children need to develop
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What Does The Research Say?
Teaching children strategies for correcting spelling is far more important than giving them the correct spelling of a word Spelling strategies and major spelling patterns are taught much more effectively through lessons than through workbooks or spelling tests If children learn spellings for tests and don’t use those words in their own writing, they will forget them within days Individualised spelling dictionaries are useful as children are trying to get a grasp of new spellings There’s a need for both schools and parents to spend more time on the basics
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What Does The Research Say?
We often wrongly assume that if children read widely they will be good spellers. This presupposes they are understanding and processing every word Children need to be taught why words are spelt as they are. They love to hear where words come from e.g. words like knight, knock were historically pronounced k-night and k-nock but it became unfashionable to say them as such but their spellings remained.
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What Are Effective Schools Doing?
Arranging training for all staff Structuring spelling so that it is taught across several sessions each week Using the teaching sequence: Revisit Teach Practice Apply Providing opportunities for children to investigate, make generalisations, discover rules and embed their learning Supporting the use of individual spelling logs Using a range of visual, auditory and kinaesthetic approaches Assessing spelling termly through children's writing and activities Building the word list words into teaching as appropriate Keeping parents informed and involved
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FUNdamentals Being able to say the word correctly and grammatically
fing yer ven thing there then Model correct pronunciation “ Yes you’re right, that thing was there then” “They comed in and rit it when they seed it.” “Yes you’re right, they came in and wrote it when they saw it.”
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Word Families/Classes
Verbs – doing/action words Nouns – names of objects, places, etc Real Nouns – Adjectives – describing words Adverbs – How something is being done These word families can be manipulated eg. an adjective into a noun kind + ness = kindness Therefore to manipulate spellings, children need to be able to talk about their functions
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Vowels and ConsonANTS Important to know to help apply spelling rules
a e i o u (and sometimes… y) Short vowels - ant egg igloo otter under Long vowels – cake bean like bone cube I mad a cak. I lik eting cak. ConsonANTS – are all the rest
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Common Exception Words
Some can be sounded out using phonics Some are ‘tricky’ because Shape – because Singing - ♫ b-e-c-a-u-s-e ♫ Mnemonic - big elephants can’t always use small exits
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Root Words (base words)
…from which many new words grow root words + suffixes hardest kindness jumped quickly hopeful boxes fearless
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Rules, rules, rules (sometimes get broken)
Putting root words into past tense… It’s all about the ending… jump jumped ice iced hop hoped hopped cry cried
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Plurals https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lD1OaD4FBqM
y to i sound rules again baby babies puppy puppies lolly lollies This rule applies to most suffixes.. happiest, silliness, happily, merriment ey drop it and add ies donkey - donkies
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Contracted Words Words are like muscles. We can contract them/make them shorter. We use an apostrophe to show we’ve missed out sounds. could not couldnot couldn’t we will wellwill we’ll I am Iam I’m they have theyhave they’ve It is itis it’s (no apostrophe needed when it’s not its thing)
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Recommend Apps & Websites
Squeebles Vocabulary Spelling City Spell with Pip Abc pocket phonics Spelling Monster Pirate Phonics Nessy Teach Your Monster to Read Twinkl Phonics Play Good Old Fashioned Games (for when the Wifi is down)
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Final Thought… A moth is not a moth in mother,
I take it you already know Of tough and bough and cough and dough? Others may stumble, but not you, On hiccough, thorough, tough and through. Well done! And now you wish, perhaps, To learn of less familiar traps? Beware of heard, a dreadful word That looks like beard and sounds like bird, And dead: it’s said like bed, not bead – For goodness sake don’t call it deed! Watch out for meat and great and threat (They rhyme with suite and straight and debt). A moth is not a moth in mother, Nor both in bother, broth in brother, And here is not a match for there Nor dear and fear for bear and pear, And then there’s dose and rose and lose – Just look them up – and goose and choose, And cork and work and card and ward, And font and front and word and sword, And do and go and thwart and cart – Come, come, I’ve hardly made a start! A dreadful language? Man alive! I’d mastered it when I was five!
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Go Forth and Conquer… Learning… spellings… can… be… fun…
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