Chapter 5: Cracking The Alphabetic Code

Vocabulary:

Phonemes: Smallest unit of sound

Graphemes: The letter that represents correlating sound

Graphonemic: Learned by matching letters and letter combinations to sounds, blend sounds to form different words, decode, and spell vowel patterns.

Phonemic Awareness: Basic understanding that speech is composed of individual sounds. Provides foundation for phonics and spelling.

Phonemic Awareness Strategies: 

  • Identifying Sounds in Words (beginning sound or ending sound)
  • Categorizing Sounds in Words (Finding odd word in set of three words)
  • Substituting Sounds to Make New Words (Removing one sound and adding another)
  • Blending sounds to form words (Blending 2-4 sounds to make 1 word)
  • Segmenting a Word Into Sounds (Finding beginning, middle, and end sound)

Teaching Phonemic Awareness: 3 Criteria

  1. Activities should be appropriate for 5-6 year olds; songs, rhymes, riddles, word play books
  2. Instruction should be planned and purposeful
  3. Activities should be integrated with other components of a balanced literacy program.

Elkonin Boxes: Teacher shows object or picture of an object and draws a row of boxes. One box for each phoneme in the name of the object. Child points to each box and pronounces sound, can also write letter in the box.

Phonics: Set of relationships between phonology, sounds in speech, and the spelling patterns of written language. Emphasis on spelling patterns.

Digraphs: Vowel and Consonant

  • Consonant Digraph: Letter combinations that represent single sounds that aren’t represented by either letter. (ch, sh, th)
  • Vowel Digraph: Two vowels represent a glide from one sounds to the next

Diphthongs: Sound produced when tongue glides from one sound to the next (2 vowels)

R-Controlled Vowels: When one or more vowels in a word are followed by an R. R influences pronunciation of vowel sound.

Onset: Part of a syllable or one-syllable word that comes before vowel.

Rime: Part of a syllable or one-syllable word that begins with the vowel.

Teaching Phonics: Best way is through combining explicit instruction and authentic application devices. Begin with consonants and then short vowels, consonant blends and digraphs and long vowels.

Stages of Spelling Development: 5 stages

  1. Emergent Spelling: distinction between drawing and writing, how to make letters, the direction of writing on a page, and some letter- sounds matches
  2. Letter Name- Alphabetic Spelling: The alphabetic principle, consonant sounds, short vowel sounds, and consonant blends and digraphs
  3. Within- Word Pattern Spelling: Long vowel spelling patterns, r-controlled vowels, more complex consonant patterns, diphthongs and other less common vowel patterns, and homophones
  4. Syllables and Affixes Spelling: Inflectional endings (-s, -es, -es, -ing), rules for adding inflectional endings, syllabication, compound words, and contractions
  5. Derivational Relations Spelling: Consonant alternations (soft-soften, magic-magician), vowel alternations (please-pleasant, define-definition, explain-explanation), greek and latin affixes and root words, and etymologies

Teaching Spelling: Weekly spelling tests. BUT, tests should never be considered a complete spelling program. Provide daily reading writing opportunities, teaching spelling of high- frequency words, segmenting words

Classroom Application:  This chapter provided great information on how to teach certain aspects of literacy such as spellings, phonemic awareness, and phonics. The notes I took will be helpful to peek back at when I need to in the future, and will also be helpful when studying for the FORT.

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