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Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?
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Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Dec 13, 2015

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Hannah Miller
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Page 1: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Contexts and Strategies

How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar.

Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Page 2: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Need paper and pencil/pen

Page 3: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Spelling Test

• Clear desks.

• No voices.

• Find your own space.

• Pencil and paper.

• Number 1-10.

Page 4: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

PSEUDOWORDS

• RICANING• VERNALIT• MOISSANT• POKERSON • FAVORIAL

• YRULPZOC• OZHGPMTJ• DLEGQMNW• CFUJXZAQ• WXPAUJVB

Page 5: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Compare and Contrast

• Tell me about column 1

• Examples of patterns

• Tell me about column 2

• Why are we able to make sense of the one column of words.

Page 6: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Internalized knowledge of letter patterns.

• We can identify a word in about as much time as it takes to identify a LETTER.

• Have a visual context for words.• What is visual about taking a spelling test.• In Word Matters…how would a child

learning to manuscript their name and doing related word and reading and writing (drawing) activities throughout the year…ho

Page 7: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

SYNTATIC CUES (pg 198.)

• WORD ENDINGS• RIDING/RIDDEN• CONSTUCTION (N); CONSTRUCTIVE(ADJ); • FUNCTION WORDS: A, THE, THAT THOSE,

HER, IT• The man was chased by at cat down the lane.• WORD ORDER• Carol kisses the monkey. The monkey kisses

Carol.

Page 8: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

SEMANTIC CUES

• MEANING OF THE SETS OF WORDS

• Define

• Examples

• How affects reading and writing for reading.

• (Same for Graphic (phonemic)

and syntactic)

Page 9: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

THE BEAVER (cloze) • American Indians call beavers the “little men of the woods.”

But they (1)___really so very little. (2)___beavers grow to be (3)___ or four feet long (4)___ weigh from 30 to (5)___ pounds. These “little men (6)___ the woods” are busy (7)___ of the time. That (8)___ why we sometimes say, “(9)___ busy as a beaver.”

• (10)___ know how to build (11)___ that can hold water. (12)___ use their two front (13)___ to do some of (14)___ work. Cutting down a (15)___ with their four sharp-(16)___ teeth is easy. A (17)___ can cut down a (18)___ 4 inches thick in (19)___ 15 minutes.

• (BE ABLE TO EXPLAIN YOUR THINKING AS YOU DO A CLOZE PROCEDURE. Why do CLOSE PROCUDURE EITHER as teacher modeling or student completing an oral procedure or as a written independent)

Page 10: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

• WORD• 1• 2• 3• 4• 5• 6• 7• 8• 9• 10• 11• 12• 13• 14• 15• 16• 17• 18• 19

• CUE• 1• 2• 3• 4• 5• 6• 7• 8• 9• 10• 11• 12• 13• 14• 15• 16• 17• 18• 19

Page 11: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

CONTEXT & CUESAs we read we monitor…

• PRIOR KNOWLEDGE (OUR schemes)• BEFORE CONTEXT (sentence or word or

paragraph)• AFTER CONTEXT (same)• SEMANTIC• SYNTATIC• Graphic (phonemic)• SOCIOPSYCHOLINQUISTIC? Explain• (self-correct as you read; using above strategies )

Page 12: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

What we do as we read.

(meta-cognitive strategies)What one does when one reads

Teachers model for children1. Predict (what text will be about): e.g., Look at illustrations, titles, headings, beginning sentences…2. Sample text: reading 3. Clarify (does what I am reading make sense, if not I use one of the strategies.) 4. Confirm or Correct and move on.

Page 13: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

WHAT DOES A PROFICIENT READER DO?

• Describe characteristics of a proficient reader?

• Describe characteristics of a beginning or novice reader?

Page 14: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Page 28

• Teaching Strategy for reading

Page 15: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Part to Whole; Whole to Part

• Compare and contrast whole to part; part to whole methods of teaching reading.

• If a child is asked to tell me what reading is….How will the child describe reading part to whole? Whole to part?

Page 16: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

TEST

Reading for next time.

Page 17: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Word Solver: dynamic readingUsing Words in reading and writing.

Teacher modeling the process(not just memorizing lists)

• Is a cognitive/thinking process for recognizing words, taking them apart, putting them together so that children can read and write with MEANING.

• The learner actively investigates how words work. Knowing that how words are constructed and used bring meaning to text. ( ed, er, th, pronouns, see list in back)

• Through reading experiences, children build a dynamic vocabulary exploring word meanings and making connections.

• The greater the speaking vocabulary, the easier it is for them to learn new words.

Page 18: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

continued

• Individual vocabulary will build double and triple with a variety of writing and reading experiences.

• Competent readings will have a variety of of word solving strategies to use as they read….they will use these with little noticable pause.

Page 19: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Page 25

• Example 1 reading• There was only one dog left• Example 2 writing• Teacher creates mini lesson to help child

or group on a skill, in this case how to figure out how to write a word

• Example 3 Word study• Wrote out sets of words with endings for

personal journal or word wall

Page 20: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Framework for teaching reading and writing

Is this sociopsycholinquistic ?• Language Experience• Read –Aloud Time• Shared Reading (writing)• Writers workshop• Independent writing • Interactive writing• Independent writing• Describe an reading and writing activity for each

of the above. Site page no. Can use Word Matters.

Page 21: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Is this Sociopsycholinquistic?

Page 22: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Shared Reading

Page 23: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Guided Reading

Page 24: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

Independent Reading

Page 25: Contexts and Strategies How letters create patterns. These patterns become familiar. Patterns in Ojibwa? Or Spanish?

QUIZ T OR F7 minutes

• 1. The text recommends 2 to 2 ½ hours of integrated language arts activities (reading and writing) each.

• 2. Shared reading is child and teacher reading together using enlarged text. Text may contain repetitive words.

• 3. A word wall is an effective method to organize words for children to use for independent writing or reading. A word wall may organize words according to the alphabet or by endings.

• 4 Ineffective reading/writing strategy: A teacher using letter/ alphabet books to help students investigate words.

• What was the strategy called that we did at the beginning of class.• As teachers sometimes we may want to draw certain words to a

child’s attention and sometimes we would not want to interrupt reading. Using ideas from Word Matters, Explain.