38 Matching Annotations
  1. Dec 2015
    1. second grade, Ms. Cleary’s students build their comprehension during the Read Aloud and in Shared Reading. During these times, students are listening to a book read to them or are supported by the voices of other fluent readers; thus, their cognitive energy is freed to think strategically about the texts. In fourth grade, however, students are able to use comprehension strategies during Independent Reading; for most students, decoding has become an automatic process. The fourth graders with weak decoding skills (Clayton, Shawnice, and Troy) listen to a book on tape during this time to improve their reading fluency and also attend Mr. Moreno’s small group for additional instruction in troublesome spelling patterns.

      This shows the difference in reading between 2nd and 4th grade readers. 4th graders- decoding has become automatic and they are now able to focus on comprehension. where 2nd graders need to listen to another reader to free up cognitive energy to comprehend.

  2. Oct 2015
  3. Sep 2015
    1. develop your students’ prior knowledge by allowing them to share their knowledge of the subject and giving the class important information they will require to make sense of the text.

      it is important to understand the context of a text. so build background knowledge

    2. more than 74% of children who enter first grade at risk for reading failure will continue to struggle to read into adulthood.3 Weak literacy skills will prohibit these children from accessing entire fields of knowledge
    3. it's another thing entirely to observe a ten year old who can only read 40 words per minute at the beginning of fourth grade, when he should be reading over 100

      startling example of achievement gaps

    4. dramatic difference in the total number of words heard by children at the high end of the socio-economic scale (45 million words over four years) and the children in the lowest sector of the socio-economic scale (13 millio
    5. dramatic difference in the total number of words heard by children at the high end of the socio-economic scale (45 million words over four years) and the children in the lowest sector of the socio-economic scale (13 million

      environment impacts students literacy ie. # words heard before entering school

    6. by reading books on their independent level and thinking about more challenging books that are read aloud to them.

      Children learn best this way gradual increase in difficulty foundational skills->practice those skills->read independently->critical thinking about challenging books read aloud to them

    7. ntain both syllables and individual sounds, or phonemes. They should be able to hear and produce rhyming and alliteration, as well as begin to segment and blend simple words (to break the word cat down into the sounds /c... a... t/ and put those sounds together again to say cat). Students should also be able to recognize, name, and easily write the individual letters of the alphabet (both capital and lowercase), and know their corresponding sounds
    8. ability to comprehend—to actively read and understand language

      Fluency=speed accuracy and precision--> depends on: ability to decode (translate printed word into a sounds) depends on: background knowledge, vocab, & comprehension skills

    9. balanced literacy instruction

      varies according to each student's needs Decoding & comp. = Phonics Component skills=researched evidence on teaching letters and sounds Word study->Read Aloud->Ind. Reading Effective methods of teaching

  4. Aug 2015
    1. oung, capable readers will seize the opportunities provided in a literacy-infused classroom and develop invaluable confidence in their own abilities, which leads directly to success in other subjects

      early readers+literacy-infused classroom=confidence in abilities-->other subjects