(Chapter 2)
1. Explain what Morris means by the traditional role of kindergarten is “to level the playing field” in terms of literacy experience.
“Level the playing field,” means to bring all students up on the same level. Some students are on a higher literacy level because they receive reading and writing experience at home. To “level the playing field: means to bring the children who don’t receive help from home up on the same level as those who do.
2. What literacy activities should be included in a kindergarten reading program?
-Reading Aloud to Children
-Guided Contextual Reading
-Letter-sound study
-Writing
3. Why read aloud to children? (5 things children learn)
-Helps children extend their experiences beyond their immediate surroundings
-Provides them with a vocabulary to make the new experiences
-Acquaints them with the characteristic rhythms and structures of written language
-Involves the child in creating a mental image and sustaining it over time
-The listener can draw on speaker’s gestures and intonation, to interpret the speaker’s meaning
4. Why is guided contextual reading important in kindergarten?
Guided contextual reading teaching students to blend individual letter-sounds, to memorize individual words, or to echo-read simple texts.
5. Describe dictated experience stories (language experience approach—LEA).
Dictated experience stories involves using children’s own experiences, recorded in their own language, to teach them to read. A group of children tell a story to the teacher, who then writes the story on chart paper so the children can read and reread the story with help from the teacher.
6. Describe big book approach (shared reading approach)
Big Books are helpful because the text and pictures are oversized. This is helpful when a big group of children are being read to.
On day 1 the teacher introduces a new book by reading it to the children and asking them questions about the story. The teacher uses a pointer to follow the words as they are being read. The children read with the teacher the second time through.
On day 2 the class choral-reads the same story at least once, while the teacher points to each word. After reading through several times, students may come up and finger-point read a page.
On day 3 the teacher works with small groups. This allows the teacher to observe the students and to see how they do with finger-point reading.
7. Why include both LEA and shared reading methods in kindergarten?
They work well together, and consistent use of both will extend children’s experiences and nurture their language development and help them master some basic print-related understandings (16).
8. Is there a role for independent reading in kindergarten?
I think there is a role for independent reading in kindergarten. I think after the teacher has worked with the children on reading, and they understand it, they can read alone. The books they are reading need to be on an appropriate reading level.
(Chapter 3)
1. What does Fraatz (1987) mean by “paradox of collective instruction”?
Paradox of collective instruction is the fact that first-grade teachers must provide reading instruction for everyone, while simultaneously addressing individual differences among their students (33).
2. What are the three critical components of learning to read?
- Attend to individual sounds within words
- Decode printed words by matching letters to sounds
- Automatize decoding or word-level processing so that the mind can concentrate on the meaning of what is being read.
3. List the four tasks that the first-grade teacher can use to assess individual children’s reading ability during the first week of school. Describe what each task is used to assess?
- Alphabet Task- the child names the alphabet letters, upper- and lower-case, as the teacher points to them in random order
- Concept of Word Task- The child and teacher read together. After the child’s finger-point reading attempt, the teacher then points to the first target word and asks them to read it, and does the same with the second target word.
- Spelling Task- The teacher does a model of sound-it-out spelling. The child tells the teacher which letter to write, until the word is spelled. The teacher then gives the child a chance to write words that the teacher calls out.
-Word-Recognition Task- The child tries to read a list of 10 words as the teacher points to them.
4. How does Supported Oral Reading (SOR) differ from round robin reading in guiding children’s contextual reading?
Round robin reading allows students to read a couple pages out loud and then pass the book along to another student to read. SOR is a 3 day process; Day 1: previewing and echo reading, Day 2: Partner reading, Day 3: Expert reading. SOR allows the teacher to guide comprehension, model fluent contextual reading, monitor children’s rereadings, and provide each child with a final opportunity to show mastery of the story.
5. Why is appropriate leveling of books important?
If the level of the book is too easy, the reader won’t be challenged, and won’t learn anything new. If the level of the book is too difficult, the reader won’t be able to understand what is going on in the story and won’t be able to read the words.
6. Describe the developmental sequence of word study instruction. What does the continuum consist of? Why is it recommended that teachers follow such a sequence of instruction?
The teacher must understand the content or developmental continuum of word-study instruction, be able to determine where individual students need to be instructed along with continuum, and must develop a method or procedure for teaching the various letter-sound relationships and spelling patterns.
The continuum consists of beginning consonants, word families, short vowels, and one-syllable vowel patterns
Teachers should follow this sequence of instruction because it allows all students to begin at the same level, and learn based on skills learned.
7. How could you assess where a beginning reader is at on the continuum of word recognition skill?
You analyze the child’s invented spelling to see if they recognize beginning consonants or ending consonants, or both.
8. Describe word sorting activities to teach beginning sound consonants and short-vowel word families.
You start by sorting picture cards by the beginning consonant sound and sound-letter pairings. Then study the five short vowels in a rhyming-word format. The teacher models practicing sorting (short a word). The students take turns sorting remaining word cards and reading the words in the columns after each card is placed.
9. What skills does word sorting help develop in beginning readers coupled with word games and spell checks?
They help the children better recognize short and long-vowel sounds. They also help children to make sense of other spelling patterns they could see while reading.
10. What is instructional pacing?
First-grade teacher’s skill in guiding (or moving) his or her students through a set of graded reading materials.
11. In what ways can writing help beginning reader’s development?
Writing can help children develop phoneme awareness. Throughout the year, the student has a sense of being the author. They are able to read their own writings, as well as their classmates’ readings.
12. What are three tasks that could be used to assess end-of-year reading achievement? Describe the tasks briefly.
Word recognition- the child attempts to read a list of 40 words, graded in difficulty from early first grade to mid-second grade
Spelling task- the child attempts to spell a list of 15 words; each of the words is scored according to a developmental rubric
Passage reading- the child reads aloud up to 6 passages that progress in difficulty from early first grade to late second grade