The Five Key Components of Reading: - Phonemic Awareness - Phonics - Fluency - Vocabulary - Comprehension
The Five Key Components of Reading: - Phonemic Awareness - Phonics - Fluency - Vocabulary - Comprehension
The Five Key Components of Reading: - Phonemic Awareness - Phonics - Fluency - Vocabulary - Comprehension
of Reading
•Phonemic Awareness
•Phonics
•Fluency
•Vocabulary
•Comprehension
Phonemic Awareness
PHONEMIC AWARENESS
• It’s
Auditory
• Remember:
Lights Out!
To understand
Phonemic Awareness,
you need to understand the
broader category:
Phonological Awareness
Basic Levels of
Phonological Awareness
• Rhyming
• Syllables
• Manipulating and Identifying
Onset and Rime
• Counting Words in a Sentence
And, last but not least,
Phonemic Awareness.
Goal:
• Help children use the sound-symbol relationship to read
and write words.
• Provide children with carefully sequenced, systematic
direct instruction
i n g Pane
l Phonics Instruction
n al Re a d
Natio
• Systematic and explicit phonics instruction is more effective than non-
systematic or no phonics instruction.
1. Monitoring Comprehension:
• Teaches students to be aware of what they do understand,
identify what they do not understand and use strategies to
resolve problems with text comprehension
Comprehension
2. Using graphic and semantic organizers:
• Helps students focus on text structure as they read
• Provides students with tools they can use to visually examine
relationships in a text
• Helps students write summaries of text
3. Answering questions
• Gives students a purpose for reading
• Focuses students’ attention on the text
• Encourages active thinking as they read
• Encourages monitoring of comprehension
• Helps students connect text to previously learned material
Comprehension
4. Generating questions:
• Improves students’ active processing of text
• Promotes students to self-monitor for
understanding
5. Summarizing:
• Helps students identify main idea
• Assists students in connecting main idea
• Allows students to eliminate unnecessary
information
• Helps students remember what they read
Comprehension
6. Recognizing story structure
• Promotes greater appreciation, understanding and
memory for stories
• Allows students to see how contents of a story are
organized into a plot
• What makes a word irregular for spelling? Can a word be regular for
reading and irregular for spelling? Can a word be irregular for reading
and regular for spelling?
Activity
• On a sheet of notebook paper, make three
columns — Regular, Rule, and Irregular. Analyze
and sort the following groups of words according
to their spellings:
• Group One: farm, cow, chick, lamb, duck, digging,
egg, barn, plentiful, field
• Group Two: transportation, car, plane, shipping,
vehicle, driving, train, barge, steamer, rocket
• Group Three: fruit, grape, cherry, banana, kiwi,
strawberry, raspberry, peach, apple, lime
• Readings & Resources Moats, L.C. (1999).
Spelling: Development, disability and instruction.
Timonium, MD: York Press. (Available from PRO-
ED, 800-897-3202)
• Moats, L.C. (2000). Speech to Print: Language
Essentials for Teachers. Baltimore: Brookes
Publishing Co.
• Schupack, H., & Wilson, B. (1997). The “R” Book,
Reading, Writing & Spelling: The Multisensory
Structured Language Approach. Baltimore: The
International Dyslexia Association.
• Resources
• Carreker, S. (2002). Scientific spelling. Bellaire, TX: Neuhaus
Education Center.
• Hall, N. (2001). Spellwell, book C. Cambridge, MA: Educators
Publishing Service.
• Larsen, S.C. , Hammill, D.D., & Moats, L. (1999). Test of
Written Spelling, Fourth Edition (TWS-4.). Austin, TX: PRO-
ED.
• Rudginsky, L.T., & Haskell, E.C. (1985). How to Teach
Spelling: Resource and Method for Planning Spelling
Lessons. Cambridge, MA: Educators Publishing Service.
• Links
• Alternative Education: Training Modules or Clusters of
Competencies
This site provides 17 training modules on various topics for
college instructors, staff developers, and teachers. Module 13
provides strategies for enhancing decoding, spelling, and
vocabulary through morphology.
• Vaughn Gross Center for Reading and Language Arts
This site provides resources for reading and language arts
teachers working with struggling readers and writers.