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Title: Phonological Awareness, Reading and Spelling


1
Phonological Awareness, Reading and Spelling
  • Sharon Walpole
  • University of Delaware

2
General Questions
  • Do you have adequate understanding of the role of
    phonological awareness in word recognition and
    spelling?
  • Does your reading program include adequate
    attention to instruction in phonological
    awareness?
  • Does your reading program include a sensible plan
    for phonological awareness assessment?
  • Does your reading program include adequate
    attention to intervention in phonological
    awareness?

3
General Plan
  • Definitions
  • Theoretical importance
  • Predictive importance
  • Illustrative research
  • Background knowledge
  • Classroom implications

4
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5
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6
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7
Levels of Phonological Awareness
  • Categorizing, matching, isolating, blending,
    segmenting individual speech sounds
  • Recognizing, generating rhymes, blending
    onsets-rimes
  • Segmenting, completing, identifying, deleting
    syllables

8
  • As you think about instruction you are seeing in
    your schools, what strengths and weaknesses can
    you see? To what extent is instruction honoring
    the developmental levels?

9
General Plan
  • Definitions
  • Theoretical importance
  • Predictive importance
  • Illustrative research
  • Background knowledge
  • Classroom implications

10
Theoretical Importance
11
  • How is it that skilled readers recognize words?
  • How is it that novice readers acquire word
    recognition skills?

12
Dual-Route Theory (Coltheart)
WORD
WORD
Process graphemes
Process phonemes
Process orthography
Access sound and meaning
Access meaning
13
  • For beginning readers, what real-life reading and
    spelling behaviors would the dual-route theory
    explain?
  • How does the dual route theory (implicitly)
    influence word recognition and spelling
    instruction?
  • What is the importance of phonological awareness
    in this theory?

14
Connectionist Theories (Sadoski and Paivio)
Word
Sound
Spelling
Meaning
Strengthen successful connections Weaken
unsuccessful connections
15
  • For beginning readers, what real-life reading and
    spelling behaviors would connectionist theories
    explain?
  • How do connectionist theories (implicitly)
    influence word recognition and spelling
    instruction?
  • What is the importance of phonological awareness
    in this theory?

16
Stage Theories (Ehri)
17
  • For beginning readers, what real-life reading and
    spelling behaviors would stage theories explain?
  • How do stage theories (implicitly) influence word
    recognition and spelling instruction?
  • What is the importance of phonological awareness
    to stage theories?

18
Self-Teaching Hypothesis (Share)
Individual Word
Decoding Process
Establishment of orthographic representation
19
  • For beginning readers, what real-life reading and
    spelling behaviors would the self- teaching
    hypothesis explain?
  • How does the self-teaching hypothesis
    (implicitly) influence word recognition and
    spelling instruction?
  • What is the importance of phonological awareness
    to the self-teaching hypothesis?

20
Skillful Reading Q and A (Adams)
21
The Reading System (Adams)
  • Reading Writing Speech

Context Processor
Meaning Processor
Phonological Processor
Orthographic Processor
22
phocks
23
phocks
This false spelling illustrates a case in which
the orthographic processor cannot help the reader
locate a meaningful match in memory. The
phonological processor, however, can make the
match.
24
Phonological Awareness Foundational to all of
these theories
  • Gillon (2004)
  • Phonological route in dual-route theory
  • Sound and spelling representations in
    connectionist theories
  • Essential knowledge in stage theories
  • Essential to decoding for the self-teaching
    hypothesis
  • Essential in skilled reading

25
General Plan
  • Definitions
  • Theoretical importance
  • Predictive importance
  • Illustrative research
  • Background knowledge
  • Classroom implications

26
Juel, 1988
  • Theoretical orientation
  • Simple View of Reading
  • Reading Decoding X Listening Comprehension
  • (a poor reader is either a poor decoder, a weak
    comprehender, or both)

27
  • Subjects54 children (of 129) who remained in a
    school from first through fourth grade
  • Low-SES school (but free/reduced-priced lunch
    numbers not reported)
  • 31 African American
  • 43 Hispanic
  • 26 White

28
  • Measures (generally Oct/April each year)
  • Phonemic awareness
  • Pseudoword decoding
  • Word reading from basal series
  • Word reading from standardized tests
  • Listening comprehension from standardized test
  • Reading comprehension from standardized test
  • Spelling from standardized test
  • IQ in second grade
  • Writing samples
  • Oral story samples

29
Do the same children remain poor readers year
after year?
  • Yes.
  • If a child was a poor reader at the end of first
    grade (ITBS lt 1.2 GE) probability .88 that he/she
    would be below grade level at the end of fourth
    grade

30
What skills do poor readers lack?
  • They began first grade with weak phonemic
    awareness.
  • They ended first grade with improved (but still
    weak) phonemic awareness.
  • They had weak pseudoword decoding ability at the
    end of first grade, and it continued through the
    fourth grade.

31
What about the Simple View?
  • There were 30 poor readers at the end of fourth
    grade.
  • 28 were poor decoders
  • 25 of these ALSO had poor listening
    comprehension
  • 2 were good decoders with poor
  • listening comprehension

32
What factors seemed to keep poor readers from
improving?
  • Poor decoding skills! (and then less access)
  • In first grade, good readers had seen over 18,000
    words in their basals poor readers had seen
    fewer than 10,000.
  • In second grade, few children reported reading at
    home, but in third and fourth grades, average and
    good readers read much more.

33
Juels Conclusions
  • Phonemic awareness is critical to learning to
    decode.
  • Success in learning to decode during first grade
    is critical.
  • Struggling readers need to be motivated to read
    and need attention to development of listening
    comprehension.

34
Other Evidence (lots of it)Torgesen, Wagner,
Rashotte (1994)
  • Phonological processing skills before reading
    instruction begins predict later reading
    achievement
  • Training in phonological awareness and
    letter-sounds enhances growth in word reading
  • Older good and poor readers have different
    phonological processing skills
  • When we measure different phonological skills, we
    find them correlated
  • Phonological awareness in kindergarten is
    causally related to decoding in first grade

35
  • What implications do these ideas have for your
    reading program?

36
General Plan
  • Definitions
  • Theoretical importance
  • Predictive importance
  • Intervention research
  • Background knowledge
  • Classroom implications

37
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38
Bradley and Bryant (1983)
  • Testing of over 400 4- and 5-year-olds, none of
    whom could read
  • Initial sound categorization (odd man out)
    related to reading and spelling 3 years later
  • Training study

39
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40
  • Sorting plus letters group outperformed both
    controls in reading and spelling
  • Sorting plus letters group outperformed sorting
    only in spelling (but not in reading)

41
Blachman et al., 1999
  • Sample
  • 159 kindergarten children (84 treatment)
  • Low-average PPVT (mean SS 91)
  • 85 free/reduced-price lunch
  • Average letter sounds 2 (Jan., K)
  • Treatment
  • 41 15-20 minute lessons
  • Heterogeneous groups (4-5) working with teacher
    and/or paraprofessional

42
Kindergarten Lessons
  • Phoneme segmentation activitySay it and move it
  • (children hear word, isolate individual sounds
    while moving disks, then blend sounds to make
    word again)
  • Segmentation-related activity
  • (initial consonant picture sorts)
  • Letter name and sound practice for
    a,m,t,I,s,r,f,b

43
Kindergarten Results
  • Significant differences between treatment and
    control for
  • Phoneme segmentation
  • Letter names
  • Letter sounds
  • Word reading
  • Nonword reading
  • Spelling

44
First Grade Lessons
  • Not all children made the same amount of progress
    in the program continue to intervene during
    first grade
  • Homogeneous reading groups (6 to 9 children) used
    in the classroom for 30 minutes in place of basal
    reading group

45
First Grade Lessons
  • Review of letter sounds, with cards
  • Phoneme blending/analysis for regular words using
    pocket charts and letter cards
  • Automaticity with phonetically regular and high
    frequency words
  • 10-15 minutes of reading from phonetically
    controlled texts
  • Dictation of words and sentences

46
First Grade Results
  • Treatment children outperformed control children
    in phoneme segmentation, in letter name
    knowledge, in letter sound knowledge, and in
    reading

47
Second Grade
  • Instruction was continued for children who
    remained in second grade again they outperformed
    the control group in measures of reading, but not
    spelling

48
  • Here are two pictures that contribute to
    scientifically-based reading research. How do
    the instructional approaches here compare to the
    programs implemented in your schools?

49
General Plan
  • Definitions
  • Theoretical importance
  • Predictive importance
  • Illustrative research
  • Background knowledge
  • Classroom implications

50
Phonemes 25 consonant (Gillon)
51
16 Vowel Phonemes (Gillon)
52
Phoneme Counting
53
  • Activities sort. There are six phonological
    awareness activities listed, with three examples
    of each (easy, moderate, difficult).
  • First group the samples with the name. Then put
    them in order by difficulty.

54
Phonological Awareness Activities
55
Phonological Awareness Activities
56
General Plan
  • Definitions
  • Theoretical importance
  • Predictive importance
  • Illustrative research
  • Background knowledge
  • Classroom implications

57
National Reading Panel Report
  • General question
  • What do we know about phonemic awareness
    instruction with sufficient confidence to
    recommend for classroom use?

58
Method
59
Sources
  • Training studies
  • Experimental design (with control groups)
  • Measured effects of training on reading
  • 52 studies were located, 1976-1999

60
Coding Variables
61
Findings
  • PA training improves phonemic awareness.
  • PA training improves decoding.
  • PA training improves spelling.
  • PA training improves comprehension.
  • PA training works for prek, K, 1 and older
    disabled readers.
  • PA training works with high- and low-SES
    children.
  • PA training does not improve spelling for
    reading-disabled students.

62
  • PA training works in English and in other
    language.
  • Many different activities can be used in the
    trainings a focus on one or two skills appears
    more effective than more.
  • Blending and segmenting are most powerful.
  • Using letters in training is better than not
    using them.
  • Overlearning letter names, shapes, and sounds
    should be emphasized along with PA training.

63
  • Between 5 and 18 hours yielded the strongest
    effects. Longer programs were less effective.
    (But the panel cautioned against making rules
    about time.)
  • Regular classroom teachers can effectively
    implement the training.
  • Small groups were more effective than whole class
    or tutoring.
  • PA training does not improve spelling for
    reading-disabled students.

64
So what can we do with what we know?
  • Choose and use instructional programs and
    approaches that develop phonological awareness
    and alphabet knowledge in kindergarten and first
    grade
  • Research program reviews
  • http//reading.uoregon.edu/curricula/or_rfc_revie
    w_2.php
  • Consider program demands against local
    resources people, time, money

65
So what can we do with what we know?
  • Choose and use assessments to monitor progress of
    all children in phonemic awareness and alphabet
    knowledge
  • Consider curriculum-embedded assessments, used
    to inform instruction and pacing, and outside
    assessments, used to provide normative
    information

66
So what can we do with what we know?
  • Choose and use assessments to screen
    kindergarteners and first graders for risk in
    phonemic awareness and alphabet knowledge
  • http//idea.uoregon.edu/assessment/index.html

67
So what can we do with what we know?
  • Choose and use intervention programs for those
    children who are at-risk in the area of
    phonological awareness or alphabet knowledge
  • Research program reviews
  • http//oregonreadingfirst.uoregon.edu/SIreport.ph
    p
  • http//www.fcrr.org/pmrn/tier3/tier3interventions
    .htm
  • Consider program demands against local
    resources people, time, money

68
  • Adams, M. J. (1994). Modeling the connections
    between word recognition and reading. In In R.B.
    Ruddell N.J. Unrau, (Eds.), Theoretical models
    and processes of reading (54h ed.) (pp. 838-863).
    Newark, DE International Reading Association.
  • Blachman, B.A., Tangel, D.M., Ball, E.W., Black,
    R., McGraw, C. (1999). Developing phonological
    awareness and word recognition skills a two-year
    intervention with low-income, inner-city
    children. Reading and Writing An
    Interdisciplinary Journal, 11, 239-273.
  • Bradley, L., Bryant, P.E. (1983). Categorizing
    sounds and learning to read A causal connection.
    Nature, 301, 419-421.
  • Coltheart, M. (1978). Lexical access in simple
    reading tasks. In G. Underwood (Ed.), Strategies
    of information processing (pp. 151-216). London
    Academic Press.
  • Ehri, L.C., McCormick, S. (1998). Phases of
    word learning Implications for instruction with
    delayed and disabled readers. Reading and Writing
    Quarterly Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 14,
    135-163.
  • Gillon, G. T., (2004). Phonological awareness
    From research to practice. New York Guilford
    Press.
  • Juel,C. (1988). Learning to read and write A
    longitudinal study of 54 children from first
    through fourth grades. Journal of Educational
    Psychology, 80, 437-447.

69
  • National Institute of Child Health and Human
    Development. (2000). Report of the National
    Reading Panel. Teaching children to read an
    evidence-based assessment of the scientific
    research literature on reading and its
    implications for reading instruction Reports of
    the subgroups (NIH Publication No. 00-4754).
    Washington, DC U.S. Government Printing Office.
  • Ruddell, R.B., Unrau, N.J. (2004). Theoretical
    models and processes of reading (5th ed.).
    Newark, DE International Reading Association.
  • Sadoski, M., Paivio, A. (2004). A dual coding
    theoretical model of reading. In R.B. Ruddell
    N.J. Unrau, (Eds.), Theoretical models and
    processes of reading (5th ed.) (pp. 1329-1362).
    Newark, DE International Reading Association.
  • Share, D.L. (1998). Phonological recoding and
    orthographic learning A direct test of the
    self-teaching hypothesis. Journal of Experimental
    Child Psychology, 72, 95-129
  • Torgesen, J.K., Wagner, R.K., Rashotte, C.A.
    (1994). Longitudinal studies of phonological
    processing and reading. Journal of Learning
    Disabilities, 27, 276-286.
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