Educ210 – Flashcard

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Which word recognition skill develops last?
answer
Syllable type
question
Why is dialogic reading based on repetition of the same book?
answer
So that children develop oral language skills
question
How do children learn to recognize words?
answer
Sound out words, sound by sound and by guessing based on initial sounds
question
Biography picture book
answer
Genre that is most appropriate for a whole-class interactive read aloud for first graders
question
What aspect of reading is best targeted through a wordless book?
answer
Oral language
question
What aspect of reading is best targeted through a guided student reading of a predictable book?
answer
Decoding and word recognition
question
Interactive Read Aloud
answer
- Book with greatest language complexity - Most challenging text - Teacher reads from a regular-sized book and controls most of the talk - Author is storyteller - Explanation of concepts - Question to and from the students - Opportunities to model thinking
question
Small Group Reading
answer
Children are grouped by achievement
question
Shared Reading
answer
- The whole class is involved - Teacher uses pointer and big book or chart - Learning about the words the author is using - Repetition
question
Shared reading- why?
answer
To model concepts of print and concept of word in print for students who don't have it To engage children in early print interactions
question
Shared reading- materials?
answer
Use a big book and pointer Choose books that have strong rhyme, strong word and picture matches, or predictable patterns
question
Shared reading- how?
answer
Introduce book conventions and print conventions Touch words as you read Engage children to read along with you and to ask and answer questions Beginning: echo format, chorally, partners, and whisper- stop to model and discuss text's meaning- children build skills and confidence
question
Fingerpoint Reading
answer
- Students are in small groups - Students work with little books, each child having a personal copy
question
Sequence of features in first grade spelling
answer
Initial then final consonants, short vowels, digraphs, blends
question
Emergent
answer
Still developing concept of word, phonological awareness, and alphabet knowledge
question
Which developmental accomplishment do we want students to master first?
answer
Phonological awareness
question
Phoneme
answer
Feature that is most complex phonological unit for children to identify Individual sounds Unit of sound
question
Minimum required for reading simple unknown words?
answer
Letter sounds, phonemic blending
question
What are three ways to use text gradients? SHORT ANSWER
answer
1. Individually: Represents increasing skills, indicate placement for instruction/practice 2. An organization system for classroom library resources 3. A calendar to communicate progress to stakeholders
question
Text gradient
answer
A method or way to categorize difficulty with books Text difficulty
question
Word awareness
answer
Phonological skill that develops first
question
Syllable awareness
answer
In the middle
question
Phoneme awareness
answer
Phonological skill that develops last
question
Onset-rime awareness
answer
The highest level of PA that a child have attained if they can segment the orally produced word "man" in /m/ /an/ Refers to each syllable (not the whole word) Onset is the part of the syllable that precedes the vowel Rime is the vowel and everything after
question
Rime
answer
Word families at- sat, mat, cat
question
Rhyme
answer
Words who sound as if they come from same family, but don't pair/dare/there eight/wait/late
question
Which two phonemic awareness proficiencies are most important?
answer
Blending and segmenting
question
Which of these would you expect a child to be able to do first?
answer
Pretend read a wordless book
question
Interactive and dialogic reading
answer
Most important reading activities for emergent students
question
CROWD
answer
C- Completion R- Recall O- Open-ended W- Wh- D- Distancing
question
Which is best to use for development of phonemic awareness for emergent readers?
answer
Initial sound picture sorts
question
If a child is motivated and interested in the content, they can..
answer
Read something that is harder than you think - they have background knowledge to support them - they won't give up as easily because they are interested and actually care about
question
Which aspect of alphabet knowledge do we target first?
answer
Pronouncing letter names
question
Segmenting
answer
Saying sounds in a word that you pronounce for them
question
Deleting
answer
Children recognize the word that remains when a phoneme is removed from another word
question
Substitution
answer
Children make a new word by adding a phoneme to an existing words Children substitute one phoneme for another to make a new word
question
Syllable type knowledge
answer
Word recognition skill that develops last
question
Vowel sounds
answer
Word recognition and spelling feature that develops first
question
How do children learn to recognize words automatically?
answer
Memorizing predictable books
question
What type of word is easiest to read and spell?
answer
CVC short vowel words Inside families
question
Foundational skill that develops first
answer
Concepts of print
question
If you are choosing a book for dialogic reading in kindergarten, what would you look for?
answer
Interesting pictures and content
question
In what setting would you choose to read a biography with emergent readers?
answer
Interactive Read aloud
question
When teachers design grade-level instruction, what do they look at?
answer
Grade-level standards
question
What are the differences between Dialogic Reading and Interactive Read Alouds?
answer
Interactive read aloud are where the teacher reads a book to the class and then controls the discussion with the students. These are the more challenging books. Dialogic Reading is where the teacher reads a book to the class, but the students are in control of the discussion, in order to discuss what happened in the story.
question
Why would you look up the Lexile of a book?
answer
Lexiles are for difficulty
question
Alphabetic Principle
answer
Alphabetic system consists of a letter and the sound that it makes Systematic and predictable relationships between written letters and spoken sounds
question
Literacy
answer
- Developmental milestones as kindergarten and first grade children learn to read and spell words - How we recognize them - How we use them to plan instruction
question
Literature
answer
- Types of literature used in elementary school - What, how, and why should we read aloud to young children?
question
New ELA Standards Require...
answer
- On-time mastery of foundational reading and writing skills - Knowledge and vocabulary building every day - Early and constant exposure to information texts of all types - Advanced levels of fluency - Experience integrating multiple texts
question
What are the 3 main shifts?
answer
1. Emphasis on knowledge building through experience with information texts 2. Redefinition of grade-level difficulty of texts 3. Movement from reader response to text-based arguments as evidence of understanding
question
Lexiles
answer
- Quantitative measures - Increased with new standards - Computer-generated measure of readability (or text difficulty) - Text is not sampled - Whole text is analyzed - Measure is a computation that considers two factors: Grammar difficulty and vocabulary difficulty
question
Grammar difficulty
answer
How long are the sentences?
question
Vocabulary difficulty
answer
How common are the words?
question
Sources of difficulty
answer
- Qualitative measures - Author's purpose, levels of meaning, text structure, visuals, language demands, knowledge demands
question
Complex text
answer
Text that contains new vocabulary, new grammar, and new knowledge
question
Grade-level text
answer
Text that meets the complexity demands of the new standards
question
Rethinking Time K-2
answer
- Challenging text read aloud - Grade-level text, redefined - Assessment- driven instruction
question
Challenging text read aloud
answer
Narrative, information
question
Grade-level text, redefined
answer
Core materials, trade books
question
Assessment-driven instruction
answer
Basic skills, fluency
question
Phonological Awareness
answer
Ability to detect, manipulate, and use the sound structure of spoken language independent of meaning NOT the use of letter sounds to read words Oral only
question
Why teach phonological awareness?
answer
- Critical to reading success - Young children who are given training in phonological awareness have accelerated reading acquisition - If we bring children to full phonemic awareness by the time they start formal reading instruction, it will be easier for them to learn and use phonics
question
How does phonological awareness develop?
answer
Word awareness, syllable awareness, onset-rime awareness, phoneme awareness develops from larger to smaller units
question
Isolation or Identity
answer
What is the first part in the word dinosaur? What is the first sound in this word?
question
Blending
answer
If you can blend sounds, and you know your letter sounds, you can read What word am I trying to say? /a//stro//naut/ What word am I trying to say? /p//ick/ What word am I trying to say? /r//ea//d/
question
Segmentation
answer
If you can segment sounds, and you know your letter sounds, you can spell Tell me the parts in celery? /cel//ler//y/ Tell me the parts in park? /p//ark/ Tell me the parts in spot? /s//p//o//t/
question
Who are our Emergent/Beginning Readers?
answer
ELL newcomers, a small number of older children with specific learning disabilities, second graders who are struggling, typically developing K and 1 students
question
Emergency Literacy Diet
answer
Foundational skills, word knowledge, rich oral and written language, writing Read to, read with, write with, word study, talk with
question
Read to
answer
Improve vocabulary Vocabulary is a high level skill Rich, constant interactions with words
question
Read with
answer
Development of concept of words
question
Word study
answer
Compare and contrast things to learn them, instead of one thing at a time Teach kids what they are using but confusing Linking sounds to letters Easiest to measure- technical- but short measures
question
Word Sorting
answer
Help children master items they are using but confusing in their spelling
question
HF word instruction
answer
Help children master the reading and spelling of words that make up the bulk of their reading and writing
question
HF Words
answer
- Have to be learned because they are so common - Not necessarily irregular - Be - Love (irregular- not VCe) - From (closed but irregular- need to know or can't read)
question
Why do we teach HF words? MULTIPLE CHOICE
answer
Common patterns that they haven't learned yet that they need to know
question
How to teach HF words? MULTIPLE CHOICE
answer
- Teach match between sound and spelling in that particular word - Not asking kids to generalize to other words - ONLY THAT WORD
question
Talk with
answer
Intense language development for children Language development, background knowledge They are thinking about ideas
question
Why do we read to Emergent Students?
answer
- Eventually, students build vocal knowledge and word knowledge through reading - Before they can read, read alouds build it - Read alouds contain more rare words that normal oral conversations don't - Read alouds give teachers chances to explain words and their meanings - MOTIVATION! When we share great books with children, we make it clear that learning to read is worth it
question
Dialogic Reading
answer
- The teacher uses a big book to allow the students to do most of the reading - Chance to use oral language - The book is the prop and the students talk - Child becomes storyteller - Focus on developing vocabulary CROWD
question
Wh- prompts
answer
who, what, when, where, why
question
Distancing prompts
answer
- Book to real world
question
How do we build word knowledge with children before they can read?
answer
Word work for emergent readers moves them from pretend reading and writing to conventional reading and writing Language, concepts about print, sounds, letters
question
Tracking text- why?
answer
To develop concepts of print and concept of word in print for students who don't have it
question
Tracking text- materials?
answer
Use a set of predictable little books or a sentence with one and two syllable words or a rhyming song or poem
question
Tracking text- how?
answer
Support children so that they know the words Work with the same book repeatedly Model pointing to the words Correct students who are off track
question
Writing words
answer
To move children to conventional writing of words, we have to lay the foundation Picture captions, font sorts, quick writes, initial sound sorting
question
Initial sound sorting- why?
answer
To link initial phoneme isolation with letter sound instruction
question
Initial sound sorting- materials?
answer
Use a set of pictures representing only three or four initial sounds
question
Initial sound sorting- how?
answer
Introduce the categories Pronounce picture names Ask children to indicate the category for each new picture
question
Word Recognition
answer
Making a match between a sequence of printed letters and the sounds (and usually the meaning) they represent
question
How do beginning readers recognize words?
answer
By guessing, by guessing with he help of some of the letters, or by using all of the letters (sounding them out)
question
How do skilled readers recognize words?
answer
Automatically for most words, but new words by using familiar parts and patterns
question
How do weak readers recognize words?
answer
Continue to guess
question
Word recognition requires...
answer
1. Automatic access to letter sounds from memory 2. A firm grasp of the alphabetic principle 3. Phonemic blending skills
question
Phonological awareness development
answer
Words, syllables, sounds (big to small)
question
Decoding and spelling development
answer
Individual sounds, specific vowel patterns, syllable types (small to big)
question
Letter Name- Alphabetic Spelling
answer
Initial then final consonants, short vowels, Digraphs, Blends
question
Within Word Pattern Spelling
answer
R-controlled vowels, VCe, vowel teams, dipthongs
question
Short vowels
answer
End of kindergarten
question
Digraphs
answer
Sh, th, ch
question
Blends
answer
fl, tr, sp, mp
question
R-controlled vowels
answer
Link a vowel and r to make a vowel sounds that is neither long nor short Shark, surprise, for, far, fur
question
VCe
answer
January of first grade Final e marks the long vowel sound (time) or is dropped when a vowel suffix is added (blaming)
question
Vowel teams
answer
Two vowels (and sometimes w or y) work together to represent one sound Long, short, or neither Team Two vowels making one sound, long or short
question
Diphthongs
answer
End of first grade
question
Syllable Types
answer
Closed, open, VCe, R-controlled, vowel team, Consonant- l- e
question
Closed
answer
Short vowel followed by one or more consonants Pronounced with short sound Vowel then consonant, short
question
Open
answer
Single vowel at the end of syllable and is pronounced with its long sound Single vowel at end, long
question
Consonant- l - e
answer
Always comes at end of a word and is never accented Enable, candle
question
Who are our Beginning Readers?
answer
Typically developing K and 1 students, ELL newcomers, a small number of older children with specific learning disabilities, second graders who are struggling
question
Beginning Readers already have...
answer
- Knowledge of alphabet - Knowledge of letter names - Knowledge of letter sounds - Concept of word - At least moderate phonemic awareness
question
Beginning Literacy Diet
answer
Same as emergent, but change the difficulty of text and focus on building knowledge and vocabulary, as well as fluency
question
Why do we read to beginning readers?
answer
- Interactive read alouds can teach them concepts of words that are harder in books than the ones they are reading - Teach children the comprehension strategies that they will use themselves later - Teach children the text structures that authors use to organize their work
question
Modeling
answer
Showing the students how you make sense of things
question
Heres a word: how would you teach it? (STEPS) SHORT ANSWER
answer
Before: build knowledge, during: model and engage, after: summarize and extend
question
Guided reading
answer
- instruction level ZPD - Small groups by achievement - grouped based on assessment - Read with teacher - Using assessment data to drive instruction - Why: to address children's literacy development based not their assessed needs- homogenous groups - Materials: little books that are decodable and match phonics instruction - How: introduce any challenging words, and then have kids read chorally or whisper read - DO NOT HAVE TO TAKE TURNS READING ALOUD - Discuss text meaning
question
Is guided reading or shared reading dictated by standards in activity?
answer
Shared reading (grade level)
question
Choral Reading
answer
Students read with support of teacher's voice MOST SUPPORTIVE (all reading together) MOST IMPORTANT
question
Partner reading
answer
Students read aloud, alternative partners
question
whisper reading
answer
Students read on their own, out loud but not together LEAST IMPORTANT
question
Synthetic phonics
answer
Sounding and blending Look at each letter, make each sound, and then say them fast to make a word
question
Analogy-based phonics
answer
Decoding by Analogy Use clue words to show you different ways
question
Comprehension Strategies
answer
Procedures that readers use to understand They all involve doing something specific, in a sequence of steps, that helps an individual thinks about the text content
question
Predicting
answer
Simplest strategy Predicting, monitoring, questioning, and re-predicting
question
How do individuals make predictions?
answer
Look for clues in both words and pictures, think about what they already know, use the clues and their knowledge to predict what they think will happen
question
Declarative Knowledge
answer
What is the strategy name?
question
Procedural knowledge
answer
How do you use the strategy? What are the steps? Put yourself in author's place, examine words and phrases for clues to what is important to the author, ask questions about what, in their experience, the clues seem to say about what the author values Lends itself well to informal texts
question
Conditional knowledge
answer
When and why do you use the strategy?
question
Inferences
answer
New ideas that are constructed by bringing info from diff places Can be made between text and prior knowledge or within a text, between one part and another To teach: teach children to identify ideas and their sources, teach them to combine them
question
Text Talk
answer
Enhance comprehension through interspersed open-ended questions (reflect on ideas in story, talk about ideas, and make connections throughout story) Enhance vocal development (target tier 2 words)
question
Tier 1
answer
- Most basic words - Rarely require instruction - Front, surprise, go, nice
question
Tier 2
answer
-High frequency words for mature language users - Important to academic success - Coincidence, fortunate, absurd - Target words - Unfamiliar to young children - Characterize written text but not so often in oral conversation - Found across a variety of domains - MORE PRECISE AND "FANCY" WAY TO EXPRESS A TIER 1 IDEA - Disappear, foolish, precious, imagine, snarl, grumpy, feast, annoy, prowl, gasp, splendid
question
Tier 3
answer
- Low-frequency words - Limited to specific domains of knowledge - Teach these in our subject-specific work - Isotope, estuary, lathe, refinery, photosynthesis, tundra, revolution, ukulele, gravity
question
Why do we need to teach more?
answer
If you can't read long words... 1. your fluency will be depressed 2. your vocabulary will be depressed 3. your comprehension will be depressed
question
Multisyllabic words
answer
- EVERYWHERE IN NATURAL TEXT - Don't provide decodable text for these
question
Text difficulty in common core
answer
- Qualitative - Quantitative - Reader and Task
question
Tier 1 Instruction
answer
High quality grade level instruction Provided to whole class Heterogenous Typical- Interactive read alouds, dialogic readings, shared reading, interactive writing, shared writing
question
Tier 2 Instruction
answer
High quality small group instruction Guided by assessment data Evaluated for effects Homogenous Typical- Guided reading of predictable or decodable text, small group finger point reading, word study, say it and move it, sounding and blending, and decoding by analogy
question
Tier 3 Instruction
answer
Very small group instruction Almost always provided outside classroom DO IF TIER 2 IS NOT WORKING Intensive Intervention
question
Wordless books
answer
- No words (pictures, some sequence of events) - May be fantasy or realistic fiction - Used for shared reading or a writing prompt for older children
question
Alphabet books
answer
- All 26 letters, with one or two pages each - Prominent, repetitive letter format - At least one picture that begins with letter sound - Upper case only, or both - Usually info, but can be realistic or fantasy - May incorporate repetition and rhyme - If repetitive, used for shared reading - If info, used for interactive read aloud
question
Predictable Books
answer
- Children can "read" book by using cues in the language or the pictures - Little decoding necessary - Typically only one sentence per page - Sometimes use a repetitive refrain - May be Big Book, little book, or picture book - Help children learn how to finger point - Used for shared reading with whole class - Used for guided reading for novice readers Beginning of K
question
Rhyming books and poems
answer
- Book fosters language play - Content can be silly - Some predictable rhyme scheme - big book, picture book, poem - May be realistic fiction or fantasy- rarely info - Used for shared reading with whole class - Often read repeatedly
question
Decodable Books
answer
- The words in book are chosen for orthographic features - Typically story or content is very simplistic - Usually little book and narrative - Pictures are primitive - Often come in sets with increasingly more difficult features - Used for guided reading or for independent reading - HARDER THAN PREDICTABLE - USE THEM TO TEACH ABOUT SPELLING PATTERNS Mid K to mid first grade
question
Fantasy
answer
- At least one thing in book is not possible in real world - Conform to narrative structure with characters, setting, problem, solution - Can be a big book, picture, or a chapter book - High fantasy- alternative world with its own rules (Harry potter) - Low fantasy- here, but adds things (animals that talk) - Very broad genre - Appropriate for interactive read alouds, shared reading, and guided reading
question
Realistic Fiction
answer
- All characters and events could be real - Generally features kids as characters - Conforms to narrative structure with characters, setting, problem, solution - Could be any format - Can provide info about other cultures and places - Historical fiction is realistic fiction set in the past - Very broad
question
Biographies
answer
- All info is accurate - Chronological in nature - Picture, chapter, or info book - Very broad - MOST SOPHISTICATED: interactive read alouds - SIMPLE: shared and guided reading
question
Memoir
answer
Snapshot of one portion of a person's life rather than the whole thing
question
Phoneme categorization
answer
Children recognize the word in a set of 2 or 4 words that has the "odd" sound Which doesn't belong?
question
Phonemic awareness
answer
Ability to hear, identify, and manipulate individual sounds in spoken words
question
Why is phonemic awareness important?
answer
It improves children's word reading and reading comprehension, and it helps children learn to spell
question
Activities to help with phonemic awareness
answer
Identify phonemes, categorize, blend to form words, segment words into phonemes, delete or add phonemes to form new word, and substitute to make new words
question
When is phonemic awareness instruction most effective?
answer
Children are taught to manipulate phonemes by using the letters of the alphabet, and when instruction focuses on online or two rather than several types of phoneme manipulation
question
Phonics instruction
answer
Helps children learn the relationships between the letters of written language and the sounds of spoken language
question
Why is phonics instruction important?
answer
Leads to an understanding of the alphabetic principle
question
Sounding and blending
answer
Help children to recognize cvc, ccvc, cvcc, ccvcc words plus r-controlled vowels
question
Decoding by analogy
answer
Help children to recognize common long vowels Can't sound and blend long vowel sounds Notice VCe pattern and it has to be a long vowel
question
What is the bulk of instruction in early grades?
answer
Working with word patterns
question
Chapter books
answer
End of first grade through second
question
Easy readers
answer
Mid first grade
question
Authentic Literature
answer
Every day in read aloud
question
How are books leveled?
answer
Expert Judgement, Readability
question
Expert judgement
answer
- Read the book and decide - Individuals differ in their judgements
question
Readability
answer
- Mathematical formula that considers sentence length and word frequency - Easy to do reliably (look them up) - Just math (more to text difficulty than this) - DOES NOT WORK FOR PREDICTABLE OR DECODABLE TEXTS
question
Levels of meaning
answer
Single/ multiple levels? Explicit/ implicit purpose?
question
Language conventionality
answer
Literal/figurative? Contemporary/archaic? Conventional? Academic? Domain specific?
question
Structure
answer
How simple or complex? Conventional structure or not? Chronological? How many graphics? Are they related to text or add-ons?
question
Life knowledge demands
answer
Simple theme? Everyday occurrences? Single/multiple perspectives? Perspective like students' own?
question
Content and cultural knowledge demands
answer
Genre convention knowledge needed? intertextuality problems? (few allusions to other words or many?)
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New