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Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz
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Page 1: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Reading is Like Driving a Car!

By Jackie Teplitz

Page 2: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Reading is like Driving a Car

Page 3: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

The Road to Understanding When Reading

One must recognize letters

and then produce the sounds of the letters

and then put meaning to the word

and meaning to all the words in the sentence

at a pace so you can understand what you’ve just read .

Page 4: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Warning Signs on the Road to Reading

They can read a word on one page, but won't recognize it on the next page.

When they misread, they often say a word that has the same first and last letters, and the same shape, such as form-from or trial-trail .

They may insert or leave out letters, such as could-cold or star-stair .

They may say a word that has the same letters, but in a different sequence, such as who-how, lots-lost, saw-was, or girl-grill..

Page 5: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Warning Signs on the Road to

Reading

When reading aloud, reads in a slow, choppy cadence and often ignores punctuation.

Becomes visibly tired after reading for only a short timedue to spending so much energy trying to figure out the words .

Listening comprehension is usually significantly higher than reading comprehension.

Directionality confusion shows up when reading and when writing b-d confusion is a classic warning sign .b-p, n-u, or m-w confusion .

Page 6: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Warning Signs on the Road to Reading

Substitutes similar-looking words, even if it changes the meaning of the sentence, such as sunrise for surprise, house for horse, while for white, wanting for walking.

When reading a story or a sentence, substitutes a word that means the same thing but doesn't look at all similar, such as trip for journey, fast for speed, or cry for weep.

Page 7: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Dyslexia

What is it all about???

Page 8: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Where is the problem?

The deficit lies in the language system, NOT in the visual system

-- NOT an overall language problem… IS a localized weakness within a specific component of the language system: the phonologic module

Dyslexia represents a specific disability with reading…

NOT with thinking skills

Page 9: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

What is a Phoneme?

The smallest sound in a word .…

It is a fundamental element of the language system, it is an essential building block of all

spoken words…

Page 10: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

The Phoneme the Gas Needed to Drive

There are 44 phonemes in the English language which produce tens of thousands of words!

A word must be broken down into phonemes by the brain before it can be identified, understood, stored, or retrieved .

It is necessary for speaking and reading.

Page 11: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

What about the Dyslexic Individual?

His phonemic awareness is less developed.

He has difficulty retrieving a set of phonemes that are similar in sound: he will say

‘passion for ‘fashion.’

He knows what he wants to say, but cannot retrieve it from his long term memory.

Page 12: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Learning a Second Language

If the individual had problems learning his first language because

of a phonological disability……

He will have difficulty learning a second language!

Page 13: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Candy Can’t Do It!

Whole Language

vs .

Phonic Instruction

Page 14: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Knowledge of Spoken Sounds

When we teach phonemic awareness we ask the student to provide the sounds/phonemes of spoken language .

Children who lack phonemic awareness are unable to distinguish or manipulate SOUNDS within SPOKEN words or syllables.

Page 15: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Manipulating Sounds or Better Known as Phonemic Awareness

Phoneme Segmentation:

What sounds do you hear in the word hot ?

What's the last sound in the word map?

Page 16: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness

Phoneme Deletion:

What word would be left if the /k/ sound were taken away from cat?

Page 17: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness

Phoneme Matching:

Do pen and pipe start with the same sound?

Page 18: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness

Phoneme Counting:

How many sounds do you hear in the word cake?

Page 19: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness

Phoneme Substitution:

What word would you have if you changed the /h/ in hot to

/p?/

Page 20: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness

Blending:

What word would you have if you put these sounds together? /s/ /a/ /t/

Page 21: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness

Rhyming:

Tell me as many words as you can that rhyme with the word eat.

Page 22: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

What is Phonics?

Phonics deals with the graphemes which make up

written words .

Phonics allows readers to crack the reading code.

Page 23: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonics Just Like Driving a Car!

Phonemic awareness must exist or be explicitly and directly taught BEFORE

phonics instruction begins .

Otherwise, the phonics instruction will not make sense.

Page 24: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonics Just Like Driving a Car!

The goal of teaching phonics is to link the individual sounds to letters, and to make that process fluent and automatic, for both reading and

spelling .

But for phonics to work, a student must first have solid phonological processing and phonemic awareness.

Page 25: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Phonemic Awareness or Phonics: Which One Is it?

How many sounds in bat?Sound out this word: rugWhat silent letter is at the end of game?What letter makes the sound /s/?

/f/r/o/g/ What word is it?Spell the longest word you know.Tell me the middle sound in mom.Tap the sounds in lake.Find another word that ends with an –m

Page 26: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

What does the research say about reading?

The two best predictors of early reading success are alphabet recognition and phonemic awareness.

Systematic explicit phonics instruction and whole language instruction need not be foes but allies .

They both are essential components of beginning reading instruction.

Adams,1990 Stanovich, 1992;Chall, 1996;Beck and Juel, 1995

Page 27: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

The “GPS” of Reading

computer

shopthe

family

(e)

sky(i)

fight

(K)

Page 28: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Words that Trigger Consonant Sounds

c /s/C /k/

Page 29: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Use of Trigger words

Trigger or key words serve as a memory device to unlock letter

sounds and as a trigger for rapid elicitation of letter

sounds.

A key word provides the sound of the letter and a connection to

the graphic symbol.

Page 30: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Words that Trigger Consonant Sounds

g /g/g /j/

Page 31: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Words that Trigger Consonant Sounds

M m

L l

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Three Important Things

Use the trigger word:

To get to the first sound:

And to name the letter:

/k/ offee

“SEE”

Page 33: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

The “GPS” of Reading

computer

shopthe

family

(e)

sky(i)

fight

(K)

Page 34: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

a a

u ue e

i i

o o

Diacritical Markings for Vowels

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The use of diacritical markings for vowels provides

students with additional visual and kinesthetic

information to reinforce the letter sounds.

Page 36: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Other Visual and Kinesthetic Information

computer

shopthe

family

(e)

sky(i)

fight

(K)

Page 37: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

The ABC Ruler

Page 38: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Blending

Once the students have mastered the letter-sound relationships of a word, they must blend

the sounds to produce a word.

The blending of sounds in a word is a critical component of learning sound-symbol

correspondences.

Fluid blending helps students produce

recognizable words.

Page 39: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Syllables

Knowledge of syllable types is important as an important organizing tool for decoding

unknown words because of the instability of the vowels in the English language.

Once students can group letters into known syllable types they then receive clues about

sounds of the vowels.

Page 40: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

The Hickey Method

Adapted for teaching a foreign language.

A method that works well for LD students will work for all students.

This method teaches decoding and encoding and enables all students to become independent language learners.

Page 41: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

I teach all my students like they are LD students!

Beginning learners of a second language do not have native speaker competence in English phonology .

Thus, their language and literacy development must take a somewhat different path than from a native speaker's development. Many believe their path takes on qualities of a L1 learning disabled student, demanding a highly individualized approach with linguistic instruction and remediation (Jannuzi, 1998).

Page 42: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

i, t, s, p

It’s Sissi.

Sit, Sissi, sit!

Sip,Sissi Sip!

Sit, Sissi, sit!

Page 43: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

Hickey Order

i t p n s st sp sn a d h th e sh c k b r m ck y- l -y f -ar o g u j w sw v x z qu

Page 44: Reading is Like Driving a Car! By Jackie Teplitz.

So Drive that Car!