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Building a Reading Foundation

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Building a Reading Foundation Teresa Gore Preparing Children to Read Phonological Awareness Print Awareness Letter knowledge Print Motivation Vocabulary Narrative ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building a Reading Foundation


1
Building a Reading Foundation
  • Teresa Gore

2
Preparing Children to Read
The single most important activity for building
the knowledge required for eventual success in
reading is reading aloud to children. This is
especially so during preschool years.
From Becoming a Nation of Readers
  • Phonological Awareness
  • Print Awareness
  • Letter knowledge
  • Print Motivation
  • Vocabulary
  • Narrative Skills

3
Phonological Awareness
  • Phonological awareness, also known as
    phonemic awareness, is not new to the field of
    literacy. For over fifty years studies of the
    relation of a childs awareness of the sound of
    the spoken language and their ability to read
    have been assessed. Recent studies have
    determined that there is a correlation between a
    childs phonemic awareness and the success in
    learning to read. In a closer look, a
    kindergarteners phonemic awareness appears to be
    the best single predictor of successful reading
    acquisition.

4
Phonological Awareness
Starts with the knowledge of sound
  • Phonemes-smallest part of an individual sound
  • Graphemes-The smallest written part of a language
    (p, b, s, or ch,sh)
  • Onset and Rime-These are word chunks that are
    bigger than phonemes, but smaller than word
    syllables in a word. The onset is the beginning
    consonant sound in a word, while rime is the
    part that follows that contains the vowel. (Like
    chop, ch is the onset, and op is the rime.)
  • Digraphs- These are two letters that represent
    one phoneme, or sound in a word. (Like ch in
    chop)
  • Blend- These are phonemes that have been blended
    together in a word. (Flag f and l are separate
    phonemes, but in the word flag the blend
    together.)

5
Phonological Awareness
Phonological awareness teaches children that
spoken words are made up of smaller speech units.
  • Phonemic awareness is not phonics, it more of
    an understanding of the spoken language. Children
    who are phonemically aware can tell that a three
    letter word like cat is represented by three
    separate sounds. Also word like cart, if you left
    the last letter off, you would have car. While
    Phonics is the understanding of the relationship
    between specific printed letters as well as
    specific sounds. A phonic understanding would be
    if they knew what letter was the first one in the
    word cat.

6
Phonological Awareness Class Application
to the
  • Nursery Rhymes and Riddles- Where sounds are
    manipulated and children can become more
    sensitive to the sound structure of language.
  • Read Aloud books- Where books are used that draws
    a childs attention to the sound structure of
    spoken language.
  • Invented spelling - Practice with sounds
  • Songs Sing songs with different notes
  • Poems Rhyming, as well as others
  • Manipulating phonemes Making new words
  • Rhyming Games- Ask what rhymes with words in a
    story
  • Syllables- Clap the syllables in words as a group

7
Print Awareness
Awareness of print helps children to understand
language to print as well as understand that
print is useful.
8
Print Awareness Class Application
  • Read Aloud Everyday Print- Things like menus,
    signs, lists.
  • Point out Print- Point to words as you read them,
    in books, ads, especially words that repeat
  • Books- Let the children turn the pages, try
    holding the book, or even tell you the story.
  • Book Position- Hold the book backwards,
    upside-down, try and see if the children can find
    your error

9
Letter Knowledge
  • By knowing the names and sound of letters
    encourages children to figure out how sound works.

10
Letter knowledge Class Application
  • Reading-Point out letters while reading, read ABC
    books with letters and clear pictures
  • Writing- Write letters in the air, or on a board,
    talk about the shape
  • Practice- Make letters out of clay, trace with
    finger, practice writing
  • Manipulation- Use letter cut outs, letter
    magnets, have children try and put the letters in
    their name in the right order

11
Print Motivation
  • Getting children interested in books will
    create an interest in learning to read

12
Print MotivationClass Application
  • Book Sharing- Make book sharing a special time,
    get the children involved in the stories by
    asking questions, making predictions, figuring
    out patterns, or repeating lines
  • Books- Have a variety of books in your class,
    both fiction, and nonfiction as well as
    incorporating books of childrens individual
    interests
  • Reading- Read things throughout the classroom, as
    well as objects in the class
  • Class books- Create books with the class using
    their ideas and model writing the words down that
    they say

13
Vocabulary
  • Increasing vocabulary helps children
    understand what they are reading, as well as
    recognize written text. Vocabulary is learned
    from books more than from normal conversation
    with adults of children or from television
    exposure.(B. Hart and T.R. Risley) Reasearch
    shows that children with bigger vocabularies are
    better readers.

14
VocabularyClass Application
  • Talk- When you talk, children are picking up
    vocabulary.
  • talk about a variety of things, as well as
    feelings
  • Ask your child to give more details, or ad
    details to what they say to you
  • Read- Every day, as well as a variety of genre,
  • Ask questions about the text and the pictures
  • Question- Look at thing around you ask questions,
    as well as trying to find words that mean the
    same thing

15
Narrative Skills
  • Being able to tell stories as well as
    retelling stories helps children understand what
    they read increasing comprehension

16
Narrative SkillsClass Application
  • Tell stories- Both from books, as well as from
    memory
  • -Ask questions
  • -Make predictions
  • -Do retells
  • -Talk about story order first, middle, last
  • - Reread a familiar book, take turns telling
    it
  • - rewrite a familiar story with the class,
    model writing in front of the class

17
Activate Their Minds
  • With these six building blocks
  • -Phonological Awareness
  • -Print Awareness
  • -Letter Knowledge
  • -Print Motivation
  • -Vocabulary
  • -Narrative Skills
  • We are creating an environment enriched with the
    skills for successful readers.
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