Phonics and Structural Analysis
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"That's right," says Kathy. "Does anyone see another word that begins with h? Keesha, come and point to the word. Good! That word is his, and it begins with h. Let's all say his and hat out loud. Can you hear that they begin with the same sound?"
Kathy is taking advantage of a shared reading session to teach her students a lesson in decoding, the process of identifying the written form of a spoken word. She uses three types of cues. Semantics (meaning) and structural analysis help the students identify the word hat; phonics (letter-sound associations) help them learn to recognize hat, he and his. "All three ways of learning to read are essential," says Kathy. "Phonics can't stand alone."
Teacher TipTeaching Phonics in SequenceTry this progression when teaching phonics:
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Ideas for Teaching Phonics
Structural Analysis
In Julia Carriosa's fourth grade class, word skill instruction focuses on structural analysis, the process of using familiar word parts (base words, prefixes, and suffixes) to determine the meaning of unfamiliar words.
"By fourth grade, most of my students are already skilled at letter=sound associations," she says. "But they're now dealing with harder words, and even when they've pronounced a word correctly, they might not know what it means. So we focus on context clues and whatever meaning clues the word itself might contain."
Be sure your students understand that many prefixes and suffixes have more than one meaning, as in inactive and inroad, and that even when they know the correct meaning of an affix, they might still come up with an incorrect definition. Emphasize the importance of checking a word's context to see if their guessed meaning makes sense.
These checklists may be helpful in assessing your students' decoding skills.
Emergent Readers
Early/Fluent Readers
Teacher TipStructural Analysis and PhonicsShared reading Have students raise their hands during a second reading when they hear a word that contains a certain sound. Guided reading After finishing a story, have students review it for compound words. Shared writing Have students compose a rhyming poem. Writing aloud Have students think aloud as they predict how a word is spelled. |
High-Frequency Words
High-frequency words are the words that appear most often in printed materials. According to Robert Hillerich, "Just three words I, and, the account for ten percent of all words in printed English."
"High-frequency words are hard for my students to remember because they tend to be abstract," says first grade teacher Kathy Chen. They can't use a picture clue to figure out the word with. And phonics clues don't always work either."
Learning to recognize high-frequency words by sight is critical to developing fluency in reading. Kathy explains, "Recognizing these words gives students a basic context for figuring out other words. Once they recognize the, they can predict with amazing accuracy what the next word will be."
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Word Walls, lists of words that follow a particular pattern, are an effective tool for teaching high-frequency words and vocabulary. Here are some ideas:
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Ideas for Teaching High-Frequency Words
Teaching Vocabulary
Julia Carriosa asks her fourth grade students to reread the following passage:
When ocean particles contain bits of soil, especially clay, the particles of earth stick to oil droplets. The more sediments that are mixed in the water, the more oil is eventually deposited on the ocean bottom.
"Now, let's suppose you don't know what sediments means," says Julia. "What do you do?"
Lisa raises her hand. "Look it up in the dictionary?"
"Yes. But suppose you don't have a dictionary handy. What else could you do?"
Julia then helps her students see that the passage contains enough context clues to give them an adequate understanding of the word sediments.
Choosing Vocabulary Words to Aid Comprehension
These steps can help you identify words that will improve students' comprehension when taught directly.
Ideas for Teaching Vocabulary
Teacher Tip: Effective Instruction
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