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TEACHING DECODING, VOCABULARY AND FLUENCY The Fundamentals
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Decoding “Given the bedrock importance of decoding at every level, teachers should strive to correct decoding errors whenever possible, no matter what the subject or grade level that they teach”
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Vocabulary Good vocabulary starts with a student friendly definition that is simple and clear Good vocabulary instruction requires a significant investment of time, choices of words are important.
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Tier 1 words – basic words that all students know cafeteria and awesome. They usually appear in oral language Tier 2 words – words that relate best to what you are teaching and that they will be able to use in other subjects or contexts Tier 3 words such as microbe and piccolo have a low frequency of use and tend to be used in a specific domain
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Six techniques to Reinforce Strong Vocabulary 1. Multiple Takes – to enter a word into their functioning memory, students need to hear a word and it’s pronunciation multiple times 2. Compare, combine, contrast. (Beware of the “synonym model” --- it’s the difference between similar words that create meaning in a passage) Upgrade – Find opportunities to use richer and more specific words whenever possible 4. Stress syntax – Students often struggle to use words in different settings.
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5. – Stress the foundational knowledge of roots so students can apply their understanding to new words. Ex. Roots like “ped” “tele” and “mono” 6. Picture this – Create a multidimensional image of each new word by using pictures and actions..
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Fluency Fluency consists of automaticity (the ability to read at a rapid rate without error) and expression (the ability to group words together into phrases to reflect meaning, emphasize important words, and express tone and register).
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Four techniques to reinforce strong fluency 1. Show some spunk – Read aloud to your students regularly----model strong reading and expressive emphasis 2. Ask for some drama – Asking students to read expressively is important—it forces them to practice looking for depth of meaning in words. 3. Check the mechanics – make explicit reference to punctuation and ask students to demonstrate their understanding of it to their oral reading 4. Lather, rinse, repeat – don’t have students just read frequently-have them reread frequently. Once they have made basic sense of the words have them go back and reread for fluency
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