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Five Essential Practices for Improving Your Students’ Spelling Janet Giannotti
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Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio: MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education Associate Professor of ESL Northern Virginia Community College Alexandria, Virginia.

Dec 20, 2015

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Page 1: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Five Essential Practices for Improving Your Students’ Spelling

Janet Giannotti

Page 2: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Janet Giannotti

Presenter Bio:

MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education Associate Professor of ESL

Northern Virginia Community College Alexandria, Virginia

I currently teach ESL reading, composition, and spelling & vocabulary in NOVA’s academic college ESL program. My students are generally one to two semesters away from beginning freshman comp.

Page 3: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Do your students make these errors?

He put them in mach box and dinning table.

He trys to figure out . . . Everyone tryed to kill all of scopian. I read about who caches the scorpion. He took the box insade his home. He took that instate of taking the right

one. The writter likes the scorpion. Then he pote them inside the box.

Page 4: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Or these?

He caught the mother and her baby’s.

The mother schorpion and its babyes came. .

He went to dinning room to joine family.

The scorpion jomped out of the box. The family members started

moveing it. When he turn on the lump they

stoped moving.

Page 5: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

How about these errors?

Can you beleive we have classmate all around the world?

Firstable the teacher introduced her self to us.

I hopped to meet you for my first day at NOVA.

We individualy introduced ourselves. I learned my classmates’s names and their

country’s. I hope you will read my latter. Let me berief you some of them.

Page 6: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

How do we teach spelling?

Memorize lists ? Write each word 10 times?

Why do these techniques work, if they DO work?

What does it mean if they don’t work?

Page 7: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Internalize rules?

Students who spell well probably see patterns and internalize rules.

Some students may treat every new word like a “sight” word.

Some students may know some rules and apply them inconsistently.

Page 8: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

“Word Study”

In L-1 Reading Education:

A student-centered approach to spelling instruction that actively engages the learner in constructing concepts about the way words work.

Provides students with opportunities to investigate the patterns in words. Knowledge of these patterns means that students needn't learn to spell one word at a time.

Page 9: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Spelling INSTRUCTION

Can accelerate the natural process that successful learners go through in internalizing the rules of English.

Can be a separate class, but combine with vocabulary or pronunciation.

Or set aside 15 to 30 minutes a couple of times a week in another class.

Page 10: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

FIVE ESSENTIAL PRACTICES

TWO PRINCIPLES Link oral and written language Use kinesthetic activities

A THREE-STEP PLAN Teach short vowels first Introduce long vowels with silent –e,

then introduce other patterns Pay attention to syllable junctures

Page 11: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Two General Principles

ALWAYS . . .

link ORAL and WRITTEN language.

use kinesthetic activities.

Page 12: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Three Steps to Follow

Apply the principles in this order:

Teach 5 “short vowels” first.

Then introduce 5 “long vowels.”

Pay attention to syllable junctures.

Page 13: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Link Oral and Written Language

Listen and repeat.

Listen and respond.

Listen and write.

Dust off your old dictation exercises.

Page 14: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Use Kinesthetic Activities

Use of a variety of muscles aids in memory.

Spelling instruction can be boring; get students moving a little!

Word Study uses MOSTLY kinesthetic activities, but adult learners don’t need so much. Save them for the spice of your class.

Page 15: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Listening Discrimination

Vowel Cards:

Listen to the word I say. Hold up the card with the vowel that you hear.

Page 16: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Listening Discrimination

Page 17: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

SORT!

Word Study uses sorts to ask students to notice or discover patterns.

Unless adults are very low literacy, keep sorts to a minimum, but try them to illustrate to students that they can analyze exemplars to see patterns.

Page 18: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Sorting for Plurals with Final -o

Page 19: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Groups Work on Sorting

Page 20: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Almost Finished!

Page 21: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Short Vowels Trigger Consonant Patterns!

Teach short vowels and the consonant clusters (blends and digraphs)that follow them.

Try a sort to discover consonant patterns.

Caveat: Don’t introduce more than one at a time with your class!

Page 22: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

You Try It!

Get into groups [always sort in pairs or groups!]

Open your baggie. Sort the cards into groups BY FINAL

CONSONANT(S). Say each word as you put it down.

WHAT DO YOU NOTICE ABOUT THE ENDS OF THE WORDS?

Page 23: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Your Sort Might Look Like This:

Page 24: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Help Students Notice RULES

In our sort, we noticed that after a short vowel,

the sound [č] is spelled –tch. the sound [j] is spelled –dge. the sound [k] is spelled –ck.

and most other consonant sounds are represented with a single consonant.

Page 25: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

White Boards Are Fun!

Page 26: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Introduce 5 LONG vowels

Once short vowels patterns are solid.

While they may not actually be LONG, they are in a distinct category.

Long vowels “sound like the name of the letter.”

Page 27: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

First Day: LONG VOWELS

Introduce LONG vowels with silent –e first.

What happens when I add just one letter? can // cane pet // Pete sit // site hop // hope cut // cute

Page 28: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

A Fun Kinesthetic Activity

Page 29: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Flip it open and you have a new word!

Page 30: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Teach Long Vowel Patterns

Use some reading material to search for long vowel words. This helps students see frequencies.

I use a short novel for vocabulary, idioms, and as a source of words for our spelling.

Page 31: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Long Vowel Search

Page 32: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Five long vowels, all patterns

Page 33: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Investigating Patterns

Page 34: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Pay Attention to Syllable Juncture

Typical ESL spelling practice asks students to add endings: big + er = biggest shop + ing = shopping

You should also ask students to HEAR the medial consonant by attending to the vowel before it.

Page 35: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

The Most Powerful Spelling Rule

In a two-syllable word,

a short vowel in the first syllable is followed by TWO consonants or a DOUBLE consonant.

a long vowel in the first syllable is followed by A SINGLE CONSONANT.

Page 36: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

And Don’t Forget to Work Backwards

Given what you know about word endings and the changes that occur to the base, write the base forms of these words: stitches, judges hopping, hoping copied, studying reddish, redness scarves, heroes

Page 37: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Spelling Don’ts!

Don’t assign lists of unrelated words to be memorized.

Don’t explain meanings of unfamiliar words.

Don’t get too stuck in exceptions.

Don’t teach rules to be memorized.

Don’t confuse intelligent nods with acquisition.

Page 38: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

Spelling Do’s!

Do mimic real-world tasks as often as possible.

Do point out exceptions.

Do teach sight words separately.

Do use some real text to search for exemplars.

Page 39: Janet Giannotti. Presenter Bio:  MA/TESL, MEd Reading Education  Associate Professor of ESL  Northern Virginia Community College  Alexandria, Virginia.

And Keep in Mind

Deliver spelling instruction in small doses.

Use a variety of activities, including kinesthetic.

Quiz often.