Remedial Instruction: Krizamari Arguzon-De Leon
Remedial Instruction: Krizamari Arguzon-De Leon
Remedial Instruction: Krizamari Arguzon-De Leon
Course Description: This course deals with the strategies and methods of
contemporary English language teaching. This is geared for English language
learners who are faced with difficulty in communicative competence in one or
more domains. It will also provide actual remediation through hands-on
practice and various situational case studies.
Course Requirements:
▪ Assessment Tasks - 60%
▪ Major Exams - 40%
_________
Periodic Grade 100%
MODULE 1
THE REMEDIAL CLASSROOM: ORGANIZATION
AND MANAGEMENT
Introduction
Learning Outcomes
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Lesson 1. The Remedial Classroom (ScienceDirect Topics, 2021)
A remedial program primarily helps students address language skills deficits by helping
them acquire self-confidence to face their own weakness and overcome these through the
acquisition of self-help strategies. A thorough assessment must be conducted before
organizing a remedial program, while consistent monitoring is imperative in managing the
program.
Below are general instructional guidelines that should be considered (Strickland, 1998
cited in ScienceDirect Topics, 2021):
• Instruction is systematic when it is planned, deliberate in application, and proceeds in
an orderly manner. This does not mean a rigid progression of one-size-fits-all teaching.
• Intensive instruction on any particular skill or strategy should be based on need. Thus,
intensity will vary both with individuals and groups.
• There is no substitute for ongoing documentation and monitoring of learning to
determine the order in which skills should be addressed and the level of intensity
required helping a child or group of children succeed in a particular area.
• To track specific goals and objectives within an integrated language-arts framework,
teachers must know the instructional objectives their curriculum requires at the grade
or year level they teach.
2. INSTRUCTION
a. The program must identify instructional strategies and activities for learners.
b. Instruction must be based upon what we know about the effective teaching of language
skills.
c. Those involved in designing or selecting instructional activities need to consider the variables
that contribute to success in language learning, given its interactive and constructive nature.
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d. Time must be provided in the classroom for practice.
e. Composing should be an integral part of the program.
f. Students should be given opportunities to become independent and to self-monitor their
progress.
g. The climate in a school must be conducive to the development of students.
h. The school must develop an organizational structure that meets individual needs of students.
i. The program must provide for coordination among all language programs offered in the
school.
3. ASSESSMENT
a. Use assessment to guide instruction.
b. Develop scoring guides and rubrics.
c. Seek alignment among various layers of assessment.
Summary
In this module we have the following take away:
• Instruction is systematic.
• Instruction can be intensive.
• There is no substitute for ongoing documentation and monitoring of learning.
• Organizing a remedial classroom has three factors to consider:
- Curriculum
- Instruction
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- Assessment
• In managing remedial sessions the following components has to be considered:
- Orientation Component
- Direct Instruction Component
- Reinforcement and Extension Component
- Schema Enhancement Component
- Personal- Emotional Growth Development
- Cognitive Development Component
Reference
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MODULE 2
REMEDIAL INSTRUCTION IN READING
Introduction
In line with the above, reading develops the creative side of people. When reading to
children, stop every once in a while and ask them what they think is going to happen next. Get
them thinking about the story. When it is finished, ask if they could think of a better ending or
anything that would have improved it. If they really liked the story, encourage them to illustrate
it with their own drawings or to make up a different story with the same characters. Get the
creative juices flowing!
Learning Outcomes
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Lesson 1. Correcting Perceptual and Decoding Deficits in Word
Recognition (Understood.Org, 2021)
We can identify the student who has insufficient competence in the visual analysis of
words in two ways. First, the student, when pronouncing words verbally, selects inappropriate
elements to sound out and often he/she tries again and again to use the same analysis even
when it does not work. The second way can be done when the teacher shows him/her the word
covering up parts of it, if the student is able to recognize it, then at least one of his/her
problems in word recognition is faulty visual analysis (Ekwall & Shanker, 1988).
A. Definition of Terms
1. Alphabetic Knowledge: understanding that letters represent sound so that words may be
read by saying the sounds represented by the letters, and words may be spelled by writing the
letters that represent the sounds in a word.
2. Sight-Word Knowledge: all words any one reader can recognize instantly (with automaticity)
not necessarily with meaning.
3. Basic Sight Words: a designated list of words, usually of high utility.
4. Knowledge on Sound-Symbol Correspondence: (a.k.a. graphophonic knowledge) the
readers’ ability to use phonics, phonemic, and structural analysis knowledge.
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write it.
6. Have students make up and write sentences in which the word is used in context. Have
them read these sentences to each other and discuss them.
B. Syllabication Principles
1. When two consonants stand between two vowels, the word is usually divided between the
consonants, e.g., dag-ger and cir-cus. In some of the newer materials, materials are divided
after the double consonant, e.g., dagg-er. It should be remembered that in reading we are
usually teaching syllabication as a means of word attack. Therefore, we should also accept a
division after double consonants as correct even though the dictionary would not show it that
way.
2. When one consonant stands between two vowels, try dividing first so that the consonant
goes with the second vowels, e,g., pa-per and motor, Students should be taught that flexibility
is required in using this rule; if this does not give a word in the student’s speaking-listening
vocabulary, then the student should divide it so that the consonant goes with the first vowel, as
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in riv-er and lev-er.
3. When a word ends in a consonant and le, the consonant usually begins the last syllable,
e.g., ta-ble and hum-ble.
4. Compound words are usually divided between word parts and between syllables in this
parts, e.g., hen-house and po-lice-man. 5. Prefixes and suffixes usually form separate
syllables.
2. Blending
(Example: /sss/ - / uuu/ - /nnn/ is sun). In blending instruction, use scaffold task
difficulty.
a. When students are first learning to blend, use examples with continuous sounds,
because the sounds can be stretched and held.
Example: "Listen, my lion puppet likes to talk in a broken way. When he says
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/mmm/ - /ooo/ - /mmm/ he means mom."
Non-example: "Listen, my lion puppet likes to talk in a broken way. When he
says /b/ - /e/ - /d/ he means bed."
b. When students are first learning the task, use short words in teaching and practice
examples. Use pictures when possible.
Example: Put down 3 pictures of CVC words and say: "My lion puppet wants
one of these pictures. Listen to hear which picture he wants, /sss/ - /uuu/ - /nnn/.
Which picture?"
Non-example: ".../p/ - /e/ - /n/ - /c/ - /i/ - /l/. Which picture?" (This is a more
advanced model that should be used later.)
c. When students are first learning the task, use materials that reduce memory load
and to represent sounds.
Example: Use pictures to help them remember the words and to focus their
attention. Use a 3-square strip or blocks to represent sounds in a word.
Non-example: Provide only verbal activities.
d. As students become successful during initial learning, remove scaffolds by using
progressively more difficult examples. As students become successful with more
difficult examples, use fewer scaffolds, such as pictures.
Example: Move from syllable or onset-rime blending to blending with all sounds
in a word (phoneme blending). Remove scaffolds, such as pictures. "Listen, /s/ - /t/ -
/o/ - /p/. Which picture?" "Listen, /s/ - /t/ - /o/ - /p/. What word?"
Non-example: Provide instruction and practice at only the easiest levels with all
the scaffolds.
3. Segmenting
(Example: The sounds in sun are /sss/ - /uuu/ - /nnn/)
In phoneme segmentation instruction, strategically integrate familiar and new
information.
a. Recycle instructional and practice examples used for blending. Blending and
segmenting are sides of the same coin. The only difference is whether students
hear or produce a segmented word.
Note: A segmenting response is more difficult for children to reproduce than a
blending response.
Example: "Listen, my lion puppet likes to say the sounds in words. The sounds in
mom are /mmm/ - /ooo/ - /mmm/. Say the sounds in mom with us. "
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b. Concurrently teach letter-sound correspondences for the sounds students will be
segmenting in words.
Example: Letter sound /s/ and words sun and sit. Put down letter cards for
familiar letter-sounds. Then, have them place pictures by the letter that begins with
the same sound as the picture.
Non-example: Use letter-sounds that have not been taught when teaching first
sound in pictures for phoneme isolation activities.
c. Make the connections between sounds in words and sounds of letters.
Example: After students can segment the first sound, have them use letter tiles to
represent the sounds.
Non-example: Letters in mastered phonologic activities are not used. Explicit
connections between alphabetic and phonologic activities are not made.
d. Use phonologic skills to teach more advanced reading skills, such as blending letter
sounds to read words.
Example: (Give children a 3-square strip and the letter tiles for s, u, n.) Have them
do familiar tasks and blending to teach stretched blending with letters.
4. Motor Imaging
It appears that even the highest forms of vocabulary and concept learning have
psychomotor foundations, or equivalents. Hence, motor movements associated with
certain stimuli can become interiorized as a “symbolic meaning” (Piaget, 1963 in Manzo
and Manzo1993).
There are three considerable advantages to knowing this where remediation is
concerned:
a. First, since physical-sensory or proprioceptive learning can be interiorized, they also
can be self-stimulating, and as such, they are easier to rehearse and recall with the
slightest mental reminder, as well as from external stimulation.
b. Second, proprioceptive learning is so basic to human learning that it is common to all
learners, fast and slow, and hence, ideal for heterogeneously grouped classes.
c. Third, the act of identifying and acting out a word becomes a life experience in itself
with the word – a value that Frederick Duffellmeyer (1980) in Manzo and Manzo (1993)
demonstrated when he successfully taught youngsters words via the “experiential”
approach.
PROCEDURE
1. Take a difficult word from the text, write it on the chalkboard, pronounce it, and tell
what it means.
2. Ask students to imagine a simple pantomime for the word meaning (“How could you
show someone what this word means with just your hands or a gesture?”)
3. Tell students that when you give a signal, they will do their gesture pantomimes
simultaneously.
4. Select the most common pantomime observed. Demonstrate it all to the students,
saying the word while doing the pantomime.
5. Repeat each new word, this time directing the class to do the pantomime while
saying a brief meaning or simple synonym.
6. Let the students encounter the word in the assigned reading material.
7. Try to use the pantomime casually whenever the word is used for a short time
thereafter.
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Assessment Task 1-1
Take the quiz assigned in edmodo.
Summary
• Remediation in Phonemic awareness can be done by addressing/observing the
following:
- Sound Isolation
- Blending
- Segmenting
• Vocabulary can be acquired in four ways:
- Incidentally
- Through direct instruction
- Self-instruction
- Mental manipulation
• Teaching of vocabulary is divided into five phases:
- Disposition
- Integration
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- Repetition
- Interaction
- Self-instruction
Reference
Understood.Org (2021). What are remedial programs?. Retrieved 05 June 2021, from
https://www.understood.org/en/learning-thinking-differences/treatments-
approaches/educational-strategies/remedial-programs-what-you-need-to-know
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MODULE 3
REMEDIAL INSTRUCTION IN LISTENING
Introduction
Listening means paying attention not just to the narrative, but how it’s told, the
usage of voice and language, and the way the other individual uses their entire body. To put it
differently, it means being conscious of both nonverbal and verbal messages. Your ability to
listen effectively is contingent upon the level to which you perceive and comprehend these
messages. Listening should not be taken for granted. Before the invention of writing, people
conveyed virtually all knowledge through some combination of showing and telling.
Listening is the ability to correctly receive and interpret messages from the
communication procedure.
Learning Outcomes
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Lesson 1. Factors Affecting Students’ Listening
Comprehension (Study.com, 2021)
1. Internal factors – refer to the learner characteristics, language proficiency, memory,
age, gender, background knowledge as well as aptitude, motivation, and psychological
and physiological factors
2. External factors - are mainly related to the type of language input and tasks and the
context in which listening occurs
A. Internal Factors
1. Problems in language proficiency (cover problems on phonetics and phonology like
phonetic discrimination, and phonetic varieties; problems in grammar; and lexicological
problems)
2. Poor background knowledge
3. Lack of motivation to listen
4. Psychological factors
5. Other internal factors (age, attention span, memory span, reaction and sensitivity)
B. External Factors
1. Speed of delivery and different accents of the speakers
2. The content and task of listening materials
3. Context - refers to the spatial-temporal location of the utterance, i.e. on the particular
time and particular place at which the speaker makes an utterance and the particular
time and place at which the listener hears or reads the utterance.
4. Co-text - another major factor influencing the interpretation of meaning. It refers to
the linguistic context or the textual environment provided by the discourse or text in
which a particular utterance occurs. Co-text constrains the way in which we interpret the
response. Here we can infer that the person is not going to a picnic by judging from the
co-text.
A: Are you coming going to Baguio with us?
B: I have a paper to finish by Monday.
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3. Recognize stressed and unstressed words
4. Enrich vocabulary
5. Teach grammar
6. Practice inferring information not directly stated
7. Improve skills in predicting 8. Teach note-taking skills
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Summary
• There are two factors that affects students’ listening comprehension:
- Internal factors which includes:
- poor background knowledge
- Lack of motivation
- Lack of Motivation
- Psychological factors
- Others
- External factors which includes:
- Speech of delivery and accent of speakers
- Contents and Tasks
- Context
- Cotext
Reference
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MODULE 4
REMEDIAL INSTRUCTION IN SPEAKING
Introduction
While a picture may be worth a thousand words, those words will no doubt come
in handy if the picture is distorted or poorly understood. After all, the most effective way to
communicate is through speech. Thus, speaking skills are a vitally important method of
communication.
Effective speaking has the power to change history, whether it is to turn the tide of war
or announce the independence of a nation. In the modern context, speaking skills have been
effective in launching iconic products. They've even brought back companies from the edge of
bankruptcy. The right combination of words and gestures can inspire people, spur them into
action, and get them to dedicate themselves to a cause.
Learning Outcomes
2. Identify the underlying causes in the gap found in the speaking ability of students.
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Lesson 1. Teaching Pronunciation (Study.com, 2021)
A. What makes speaking difficult?
1. Clustering
2. Redundancy
3. Reduced forms
4. Performance variables
5. Colloquial language
6. Rate of delivery
7. Stress, rhythm, and intonation
8. Interaction
Summary
• Some of the techniques that can be used in teaching pronunciation are the
following:
- Listen and Imitate
- Phonetic Training
- Minimal Pair Drills
- Contextualized minimal pairs
- Visual Aids
- Tongue twisters
- Developmental approximation drills
- Practice of vowel shifts and stress shifts
- Reading aloud.
• Accuracy Based Activities example:
- Contextualized practice
- Personalizing language
- Building Awareness of the Social Use of Language
- Building confidence
Reference
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