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SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11
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SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT

Chapter 11

Page 2: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

You don’t have to read chapter 11**

• The test questions are based on Power Point only

• However, before grad school, I recommend that you read the chapter because it will help you in the child language and curriculum classes

Page 3: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

PowerPoint Outline:• I. Introduction• II. The Process of Reading• III. Reading Development• IV. Reading and the

Common Core State Standards

• V. Supporting Students with Literacy Deficits

Page 4: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

I. INTRODUCTION

Page 5: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

This is one reason why…

Page 6: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

New research is finding that for many children, esp. those who are at risk: (“Research on all-day kindergarten” www.education.com)

Page 7: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Written language skills are based on 2 major factors

Page 8: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

This is why, when a child is struggling, I often ask a parent:**

• Is there a family history of reading difficulty? Does anyone in the family have any reading problems?

• Sometimes it can even be an uncle, aunt, or grandparent

Page 9: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

II. THE PROCESS OF READING

Page 10: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

This 3rd grade girl brought her classroom work

Page 11: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Nick brought these from his special day class to use in therapy

Page 12: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

A. Step 1 in reading:

Page 13: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

The child brings their knowledge to the task

Page 14: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

B. Step 2 in reading:

Page 15: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Tambyraja, Farquharson, Logan, & Justice (2015). Decoding skills in children with language impairment:

Contributions of phonological processing and classroom performance. American Journal of Speech-

Language Pathology, 24, 177-188.**

• They looked at children with language impairment (LI) and measured their phonological processing and word decoding skills 2x during the academic year

Page 16: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

The study found that:

Page 17: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

C. Step 3 in reading: Morphological awareness (MA)**

• The recognition, understanding, and use of word parts that carry significance

• For example, students need to understand that prefixes, suffixes, inflections, and root words are all morphemes which can be taken away from or added to words to change their meaning.

Page 18: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

More than 50% of English words are morphologically complex**

Students with strong MA are able to approach a novel multisyllabic word and break it into parts in order to predict the word’s meaning.

• This helps in many areas: decoding, spelling, comprehension, and oral language

Page 19: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

MA is especially critical because….

Page 20: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Good, Lance, & Rainey (2015). The effects of morphological awareness training on reading,

spelling, and vocabulary skills. Communication Disorders Quarterly, 36 (3), 142-151.**

• This study examined the impact of linguistically explicit instruction on the morphological awareness (MA) skills of 3rd grade children with language impairment

Page 21: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

In this study, they found that children who had explicit MA instruction:

Page 22: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

In the study, what worked?**

• Discussion of rules (e.g., “adding –ly means that an adjective becomes an adverb; an adverb is an adjective that modifies a verb”)

Page 23: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

What also worked…

Page 24: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

The study also…

Page 25: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

D. Step 4 in reading—comprehension:**

• Meaning is actively constructed by the interaction of words and sentences with personal meanings and experiences

• At the basic level is decoding

Page 26: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

At the highest level:

Page 27: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

E. Step 5: Reading fluency (#wpm) depends on a number of factors:

Page 28: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 29: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

III. READING DEVELOPMENT**• Prereading: social rather than

formal instruction—parents and children read together

• The more and earlier parents read, the greater the child’s oral lang and emergent literacy skills

Page 30: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 31: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

A. Preschool children (hopefully!) develop print awareness:**

• 1. Display an interest in sharing books

• 2. Know how to hold a book right side up

Page 32: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 33: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 34: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 35: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Youtube video**

• Fostering print awareness in low-income preschool children

Page 36: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

B. Formal reading instruction**• Occurs in school

• Phonics: sound-letter correspondence in early grades

• By 7-8 years of age, most ch have the knowledge to become competent readers

Page 37: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

In 3rd grade…

Page 38: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 39: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

IV. READING AND THE COMMON CORE STATE STANDARDS

Page 40: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

**The overarching goal is to create students who are ready to succeed in a globally competitive, 21st century society

Page 41: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Common Core State Standards--4 major goals:

Page 42: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

**Unlike No Child Left Behind (2002), there are no fiscal or other punitive consequences in the standards.

Despite this, many professionals nationwide are trying hard to figure out how to help children achieve the standards

Page 43: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

**The Common Core State Standards, enacted in 2010, have been adopted by 46 out of 50 states.

The standards address English Language Arts and Math

Page 44: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

English Language Arts Consists of 4 Areas:

Page 45: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

The Common Core State Standards…

Page 46: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

This is narrative (story), not expository

Page 47: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

**Currently, only 15% of text in elementary school is expository, yet expository reading makes up 80% of reading done in college and workforce.

The CCSS will shift expository percentages to 50/50 at elem level, 60/40 in middle school, 75/25 in high school.

Page 48: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

In the past, students asked how** they felt about readings—give opinions-- relate readings to their own personal experience.

Page 49: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

• The CCSS de-emphasize feelings and personal experience, demanding that students present evidence for their answers.

They will be asked to present arguments justified by the text they have read.

Page 50: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

Grade 5 Standard 3:** Summarize the points a speaker makes and explain how each claim is supported by reasons and evidence.

Grade 9 Standard 3: Evaluate a speaker’s point of view, reasoning, and use of evidence and rhetoric, identifying any fallacious reasoning or exaggerated or distorted evidence.

Examples not on exam

Page 51: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

V. SUPPORTING STUDENTS WITH LITERACY DIFFICULTIES

Page 52: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

• Help with reading comprehension**

• I have students bring their language arts or other books from their classrooms; we use those in therapy

Page 53: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.
Page 54: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

SUPER POWER READING STRATEGIES**Before I read:

Look at the title, headings, and picturesLook at any words in italics or boldface

Read the summary at the end of the chapter

While I read:

Visualize what I read; make detailed pictures in my brainAsk myself questions about what I’m reading

Predict what will happen nextHighlight key ideas

After I have read the whole thing:

Look at the title, headings, and pictures againRead over my highlights

Ask questions about what I have just readSummarize what I have just read in my own words

Page 55: SCHOOL-AGE LITERACY DEVELOPMENT Chapter 11. You don’t have to read chapter 11** The test questions are based on Power Point only However, before grad.

PowerPoint Outline:• I. Introduction• II. The Process of Reading• III. Reading Development• IV. Reading and the

Common Core State Standards

• V. Supporting Students with Literacy Deficits