Transcript Chapter 3

Chapter 4
Fostering Emergent/Early Literacy
What is Emergent/Early Literacy
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Early literacy
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The child already has some knowledge
of reading and writing.
Emergent Literacy
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The child is on the verge of acquiring
this reading and writing knowledge.
It consists of the reading and writing
behaviors that evolve from children’s
earliest experiences with reading and
writing.
This grows into conventional literacy.
Essential Skills/Understandings for Emergent
Literacy: What are Concepts of Print
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What we say and what others say
can be written down and read.
Words, not pictures, are read.
Sentences are made up of words and
words are made up of letters.
Reading goes from left to right and
top to bottom.
A book is read from front to back.
Concepts of Print Continued
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What we say is divided into words.
Spaces separate written words.
Sentences begin with capital letters.
Sentences end with periods, question
marks, or exclamation points.
A book has a title, an author, and
sometimes an illustrator.
Students must develop phonological
awareness and arrive at an
understanding of the alphabetic principle.
What is a literacy rich classroom?
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An environment that promotes
opportunities for active reading,
writing, listening, and speaking.
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What are examples of how this can be
done?
How could you arrange the classroom
to most facilitate this type of
environment?
Reading to Students
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One of the best ways to develop
students’ emergent literacy is to read
interesting books to them.
It helps…
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Develop children’s vocabulary.
Develop their experiential background.
Make them aware of the language of books.
Introduce them to concepts of print and how
books are read.
Provide them with an enjoyment of reading.
How Can You Develop Story
Structure?
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Discuss literary language with your
students.
Point out story elements
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Characters
Setting
Problem
Events
Solution
Theme
How Can You Build Comprehension
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During book discussions, ask a variety of
questions, including those that involve
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Use questions as a way of
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Important details
Sequence
Drawing conclusions
Making Inferences
Drawing attention to important details.
Relating details so that a conclusion can be
drawn.
Constructing main ideas.
Think of discussions as a way of sharing
so that books can be more fully
understood and enjoyed.
How Can You Help Students Make
Personal Connections
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After discussing a story, do followup or extension activities.
Use the book to develop learning
centers.
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Listening center—tape of story
Watch a videotape
Read other books by the same author.
Activity related to the book.
What is a Themed Approach?
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A way to make connections using
units of study.
Focus is a common topic or theme.
Example—Transportation
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Read aloud books with a travel theme
Sing song and recite rhymes
Transportation vocabulary words
Environmental print—road signs, travel
schedules, receipts.
What is Emergent Storybook Reading?
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The evolving ability of a child to
read storybooks.
Progresses from…
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Simply telling the story using the
pictures in the book or after hearing it
read aloud.
Reading the book conventionally.
What is a Shared Book Experience?
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The teacher reads aloud to students
using a big book.
Books chosen usually have
repetitive text or chants, songs, and
poems.
Provides multiple exposures to a
book.
Reinforces concepts of print.
What is a Language Experience
Approach?
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Approach to literacy teaching where
one student or a group of students
dictates a story to the teacher.
The dictated story is used for
reading and writing instruction.
Steps in the LEA
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1. Teacher and student discuss the topic to be focused on in
the dictation. Observations and opinions are exchanged. Oral
language skills are developed and reinforced.
2. The student dictates an account or story to the teacher,
who records the statements to construct the basic reading
material.
3. The student reads the story several times (with the
teacher helping as needed), until the story has become quite
familiar. Reading comprehension is made easier by the fact
that the student is reading material that is self-generated.
4. Individual story words are learned, and other reading skills
are reinforced through teacher-designed activities related to
the story.
5. Students move from reading their own dictation to reading
other-author materials as they develop confidence and skill
with the reading process.
Shared Writing
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Both the teacher and students compose a
story together.
The class writes about experiences they
have had or about books that they have
read.
Students can actual participate in the
writing.
Students help with the spelling or writing
of initial, medial, or ending sounds.
The teacher emphasizes reading for
meaning and basic concepts about print.
When Should Writing Instruction Begin
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Immediately!!
Reading and writing skills develop
simultaneously and are interrelated.
Writing instruction is not
handwriting, copying, or spelling
instruction.
Writing development progresses
from random scribbling to
meaningful marks.
Consonant Sounds
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Consonants are formed by obstructing or
interfering in some way with the flow of the
breath.
There are 25 consonant sounds in the English
language.
Consonants can be distinguished by place and
manner of articulation and voice.
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Voiced consonant-accompanied by a vibration of the
vocal cords-ex. /b/
Voiceless consonant-no vibration is heard-ex. /p/
Consonant Sounds Continued
Look at page 143. How do you use your tongue, lips, and teeth to form the
consonant sounds?
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Voiced stop-barn-/b/-lips; deer-/d/-tongue behind teeth; gate-/g/-back of
mouth
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Voiceless stop-pot-/p/-lips; time-/t/-tongue behind teeth; kite-/k/-back of
mouth
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Nasals-me-/m/-lips; now-/n/-tongue behind teeth; sing-/ng/-back of
mouth
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Voiced fricative-van-/v/-lips and teeth; this-/th/-tongue between teeth;
zipper-/z/-tongue behind teeth; azure-/zh/-roof of mouth
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Voiceless fricative-fan-/f/-lips and teeth; thin-/th/-tongue between teeth;
sight-/s/-tongue behind teeth; ship-/sh/-roof of mouth; horse-h-throat
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Voiced affricative-jug-/j/-roof mouth
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Voiceless affricative-chip-/ch/-roof of mouth
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Semivowels-we-/w/-lips; yacht-/y/-roof of mouth
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Glides-whale-/hw/-lips
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Liquids-ride-/r/-lips and teeth; lion-/l/-roof of mouth
Vowel Sounds
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Vowels are articulated with the
tongue, lips, and teeth.
Vowels are classified according to
where they are articulated.
Look at page 144. Say each vowel
sound. What do you notice about
how it is articulated?
Why are /oy/ and /ow/ not included
in the chart?
Vowel Sounds Continued
Front
Central
Back
High
/ē/ (beat)
/ĭ/ (bit)
/ōō/ (boot)
/oo/ (book)
Mid
/ā/ (bait)
/ĕ/ (bet)
/ŭ/ (but)
Schwa
/ō/ (boat)
Low
/ă/ (bat)
/ī/ (bite)
/ŏ/ (bottle)
/aw/ (bought)
Effect of Environment
Speech sounds are altered by the other sounds that surround them.
This can cause confusion for children when trying to spell the words.
Nasalization-/m/,
/n/, and /ŋ/ are partially absorbed by the
preceding and following consonants (ex. ant spelled as at, sand
spelled as sad). It helps to present –an and –am patterns as units
versus as individual sounds: /a/ and /n/ or /a/ and /m/.
Syllabic consonants-/l/, /r/, /m/, and /n/ at the end of the word
can represent a syllable (ex. letter spelled as letr, little as litl)
Affrication-a stop of breath is followed by a fricative (ex. phonemes
/t/ and /d/ are affricated when they appear before the /r/ sound (ex.
train spelled as chran; drum as jrm or jm)
Aspiration-a puff of air made when you articulate. For example, pit
versus tip-which moves the paper? The sounds /b/, /p/, and /k/ are
usually aspirated at the beginning of a syllable, but not at the end.
This may confuse students when they are spelling words.
Vowel blending-some vowels blend in with the consonant sound
that follows them. This is especially true of the consonant sounds /l/
and /r/--bird may be spelled as brid, and girl as grl.
Spelling Developmental Stages
Random Scribbling
18 months
Wordlike Scribbling
3 years
Prephonemic writing
(Also called
Prealphabetic)
4-5 years
Early Alphabetic
4-6 years
Alphabetic
5-7 years
Consolidated
6-7 years
Syllable Juncture
Derivational Constancy
8-10 years
10-20 years
Encouraging Children to Write
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Make sure every student realizes that he
or she has something to say.
The teacher’s role should be active where
she models the writing process at every
opportunity.
Invitations to write should be extended
whenever possible.
Children of all developmental stages can
write—whether it is scribbling, drawing a
picture, or using invented spelling.
Encourage children to read their writing to
others.
Effective Writing Activities
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Write letters to each other
Create invitations for events
Write stories about what is
happening in their lives
Write stories about special events
Make connections to books they are
reading
Encourage children to make lists
Key Words
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Phonological Awareness—the ability to
detect rhyme and separate the sounds in
words. This is a broad area that includes
phonemic awareness.
Phoneme—individual speech sounds
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How many sounds are in the word cake?
Phonemic Awareness—an awareness of
sounds in the speech stream.
Grapheme—written letter(s) that
represents the sound
Coarticulation—the process of articulating
a sound while still articulating the
previous sound.
Using Word Play to Develop
Phonological Awareness
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Play games with words.
Read books that have fun with
words.
Read books that call attention to
word parts.
Developing the Concept of Rhyme
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Read nursery rhymes and other
rhyming stories to students to help
develop their concept of rhyme.
Discuss the concept of rhyme. What
does this mean?
Build rhymes with students.
Use word families to build concept
of rhyme.
What is Blending?
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Students create words by combining word
parts.
Onsets and rimes can be used for
blending activities:
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Onset—the part of the word prior to the vowel.
(c)
Rime—the vowel to the end of the word (-at)
Ask students to solve riddles that
incorporate both rhyming and blending:
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I’m thinking of a word that begins with /t/ and
rhymes with man. What is my word?
Helping Students to Perceive
Beginning Consonant Sounds
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Use the concept of alliteration to
reinforce the beginning consonants
sounds we hear in words.
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Animalia
Four Famished Foxes and Fosdyke
What is Segmenting?
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Segmenting is the process of
separating words into sounds.
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What sounds do you hear in horse?
Use Elkonin boxes to segment
words.