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Supporting Early Literacy Learning Session 1 Julie Zrna March 2011
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Explicit teaching in first 3 years (and beyond if necessary)... §Phonics l Relationship between sounds and letters §Phonemic Awareness l Ability to hear and manipulate the sounds in oral language §Vocabulary Development l Understanding new words §Fluency l Ability to read quickly and naturally §Comprehension l Understanding what is being read
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Basic Beliefs §Children learn to read by reading §Meaning is the given in all reading §Teaching must be centred on the needs of the child §Teaching must incorporate a combination of approaches §Good teaching is vital §Literacy foundations are laid in the early years
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Effective Instruction §Time (for practicing) §Texts (at appropriate levels) §Teaching (active instruction) §Talk (teacher/student + student/student) §Tasks (longer assignments) §Testing (effort and improvement) Allington
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Components of the SELL Program Reading By Children (Familiar Reading) Shared Reading Reading To Children Modelled/Interactive Writing Reading With Children (Guided Reading)
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The SELL Program §Prep to Year 2:Daily, 30 minutes l Reading By Children (8 – 10 minutes) l Shared Book (3 - 4 minutes) l Reading To Children (3 - 4 minutes) l Writing (7 – 8 minutes) l Reading With Children (7 – 8 minutes)
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The SELL Program §Year 2 - Year 4:Daily, 40 minutes l Reading By Children (10 – 12 minutes) l Shared Reading OR Reading To Children (8 - 10 minutes) l Writing (10 – 12 minutes) l Reading With Children (10 – 12 minutes)
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Assessment §Prep to Year 2 l Observation Survey Running Records Letter Identification Concepts About Print Word Reading Writing Hearing and Recording Sounds in Words l Burt l 2-3 Writing Samples, 1st draft
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Assessment §Year 2 to Year 4 l Observation Survey (if appropriate)OR l WRAP Reading Survey Reading Assessment Writing Sample l Peters Spelling or SA Spelling
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Observation Survey §Running Records l Analysis needs to be done carefully l Consider sentence only up to the error l Total number of M or S or V circles is only a guide l Instructional Level is highest level below Hard Level l Record how the reading sounds l Difference between seen and unseen text
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Observation Survey §Changes to look for in Running Records as children are progressing l Readers use M + S + V (eg house/home) l Readers utter word beginning then whole word (eg pl/play) l Readers correct what might have been an error (eg pr/teacher) l Sometimes there are more repetitions l Self corrections occur less frequently
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Observation Survey §Letter Identification l Not a stand alone indicator of preparation for literacy learning l Letter names are a limited way of testing what children know about letters l Not assessing whole set may miss half of what some children know l Designed to find what children do and do not know rather than for predicting progress l Cautions about assessing letter-sound relationships At a different time Difficulties are surprising (U-37%, q-35%, x-34%, X-33%, Y-19%, Q-18%, y-17%)
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Observation Survey §Word Reading l Does not give a reading age l Does not discriminate between better readers after one year of instruction l Differences of less than 3 score points are not sufficiently reliable l Does not sample child’s Word Reading beyond early reading books
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Observation Survey §Writing Vocabulary l Correct spelling l Reversed letters l Words written right to left l Series of words l Capital letters
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Observation Survey §Hearing and Recording Sounds in Words l Children have to learn sounds buried within words l Children have to learn to visually discriminate the symbols we use in print l Children have to learn to link single sounds and clusters of symbols with sounds l Children have to learn there are many alternatives and exceptions
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W.R.A.P. §The Reading Survey l Complete as part of reading conference l Work through response sheet with students – have students fill in answers l Develop good relationship and easy rapport l Help children feel confident
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W.R.A.P. §The Reading Assessment l Preparation l Choosing the First Text Passage l Introducing the Text l Reading the Text l Recording the Oral Reading Behaviour l Retelling l Comprehension Prompts l Deciding on another passage
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W.R.A.P. §Analyzing the Assessment Information l Calculate the percentage accuracy l Add retelling and comprehension scores l Determine the description which best fits the students reading and responses l Compare the students scores with the benchmarks
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Using the Assessment Information §Reading groups §Addressing areas of need l Fluency l Retelling l Comprehension responses
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W.R.A.P. §Assessing Students’ Writing l Assessing Writing Samples Clarity and interest Organization Conventions of writing Revising, editing and checking l Ongoing Assessment
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W.R.A.P. §The writing is interesting §The writing is clear and coherent §The ideas are well organized §Conventions of writing are used appropriately §There is evidence of revising, editing and checking
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W.R.A.P. §Analyzing the Writing 4=Always 3=Mostly 2=Sometimes 1=Seldom or never
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W.R.A.P. §Analyzing the Writing 17 – 20 excellent 13 – 10competent 10 – 12fair Below 10of concern
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