This document discusses key aspects of teaching reading skills. It covers:
1. Defining reading as the process of identifying words, comprehending meaning, and coordinating the two fluently.
2. The importance of developing word recognition, comprehension, and fluency. Word recognition involves phonics, sight words, and decoding. Comprehension requires background knowledge and strategies. Fluency combines accuracy, speed and expression.
3. Additional factors that influence reading ability, such as vocabulary, spelling, motivation and writing skills. Developing strengths in these areas supports reading development.
This document discusses key aspects of teaching reading skills. It covers:
1. Defining reading as the process of identifying words, comprehending meaning, and coordinating the two fluently.
2. The importance of developing word recognition, comprehension, and fluency. Word recognition involves phonics, sight words, and decoding. Comprehension requires background knowledge and strategies. Fluency combines accuracy, speed and expression.
3. Additional factors that influence reading ability, such as vocabulary, spelling, motivation and writing skills. Developing strengths in these areas supports reading development.
This document discusses key aspects of teaching reading skills. It covers:
1. Defining reading as the process of identifying words, comprehending meaning, and coordinating the two fluently.
2. The importance of developing word recognition, comprehension, and fluency. Word recognition involves phonics, sight words, and decoding. Comprehension requires background knowledge and strategies. Fluency combines accuracy, speed and expression.
3. Additional factors that influence reading ability, such as vocabulary, spelling, motivation and writing skills. Developing strengths in these areas supports reading development.
This document discusses key aspects of teaching reading skills. It covers:
1. Defining reading as the process of identifying words, comprehending meaning, and coordinating the two fluently.
2. The importance of developing word recognition, comprehension, and fluency. Word recognition involves phonics, sight words, and decoding. Comprehension requires background knowledge and strategies. Fluency combines accuracy, speed and expression.
3. Additional factors that influence reading ability, such as vocabulary, spelling, motivation and writing skills. Developing strengths in these areas supports reading development.
abmr_bakar@upm.edu.my What is Reading? • Reading is making meaning from print. It requires that we: 1. Identify the words in print – A process called word recognition 2. Construct an understanding from them – A process called comprehension 3. Coordinate identifying words and making meaning so that reading is automatic and accurate – An achievement called fluency What is Reading? • Sometimes you can make meaning from print without being able to identify all the words. Remember the last time you got a note in messy handwriting? You may have understood it, even though you couldn't decipher all the scribbles.
• Sometimes you can identify words without being able to construct
much meaning from them. Read the opening lines of Lewis Carroll's poem, "Jabberwocky," and you'll see what I mean.
• 'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves
• Did gyre and gimble in the wabe: • All mimsy were the borogoves, • And the mome raths outgrabe. What is Reading? • On yet another note, sometimes you can identify words and comprehend them, but if the processes don't come together smoothly, reading will still be a labored process. • For example, try reading the following sentence:
It isn't as if the words
are difficult to identify or understand, but the spaces make you pause between words, which means your reading is less fluent. 1) Reading: Word Recognition • Reading in its fullest sense involves weaving together word recognition and comprehension in a fluent manner. These three processes are complex, and each is important. • To develop word recognition, children need to learn: 1. How to break apart and manipulate the sounds in words – This is phonemic awareness (Example: feet has three sounds: /f/, /e/, and /t/) 2. Certain letters are used to represent certain sounds – This is the alphabetic principle (Example: ‘s’ and ‘h’ make the /sh/ sound) 3. How to apply their knowledge of letter-sound relationships to sound out words that are new to them – This is decoding (Example: ssssspppoooon – spoon!) 4. How to analyze words and spelling patterns in order to become more efficient at reading words – This is word study (Example: Bookworm has two words I know: book and worm) 5. To expand the number of words they can identify automatically, called their sight vocabulary (Example: Oh, I know that word – the!) 2) Reading: Comprehension • To develop comprehension, readers need to have: 1. Background knowledge about many topics (Example: This book is about zoos – that's where lots of animals live.) 2. Extensive oral and print vocabularies (Example: Look at my trucks – I have a tractor, and a fire engine, and a bulldozer.) 3. Understandings about how the English language works (Example: We say she ‘went’ home, not she ‘goed’ home.) 4. Understandings about how print works (Example: Reading in English goes from left to right) 5. Knowledge of various kinds of texts (Example: I bet they live happily ever after.) 6. Various purposes for reading (Example: I want to know what ladybugs eat.) 7. Strategies for constructing meaning from text, and for problem solving when meaning breaks down (Example: This isn't making sense. Let me go back and reread it.) 3) Reading: Fluency • To develop fluency, readers need to: 1. Develop a high level of accuracy in word recognition 2. Maintain a rate of reading brisk enough to facilitate comprehension 3. Use phrasing and expression so that oral reading sounds like speech 4. Transform deliberate strategies for word recognition and comprehension into automatic skills 4) Reading Motivation
1. But if reading isn't pleasurable or
fulfilling, readers won't choose to read, and they won't get the practice they need to become fluent readers. 2. Therefore, reading also means developing and maintaining the motivation to read. 3. Reading is an active process of constructing meaning—the key word here is active. 4) Reading Motivation (cont.) 4. To develop and maintain the motivation to read, readers need to: a) Appreciate the pleasures of reading b) View reading as a social act, to be shared with others c) See reading as an opportunity to explore their interests d) Read widely for a variety of purposes, from enjoyment to gathering information e) Become comfortable with a variety of different written forms and genres NINE IMPORTANT BASICS OF READING 1. Print Awareness 2. Sounds of Speech 3. Phonemic Awareness 4. Phonics 5. Fluency 6. Vocabulary 7. Spelling 8. Comprehension 9. Writing 1) Print Awareness • Children who have an awareness of print understand that the squiggly lines on a page represent spoken language. • Children with print awareness understand that print has different functions depending on the context in which it appears. For example, menus list food choices, a book tells a story, a sign can announce a favorite restaurant or warn of danger. 1) Print Awareness (cont.) • Print awareness is understanding that print is organized in a particular way — for example, knowing that print is read from left to right and top to bottom. • It is knowing that words consist of letters and that spaces appear between words. • Print awareness is a child's earliest introduction to literacy. 2) Sounds of Speech • To understand a spoken language, a child must be able to hear and distinguish the sounds that make up the language. • Virtually every child raised in a normal linguistic environment can distinguish between different speech sounds in his or her native language. Almost all native English speakers can therefore hear the difference between similar English words like “grow” and “glow.” • Children who are not able to hear the difference between similar-sounding words like “grow” and “glow” will be confused when these words appear in context, and their comprehension skills will suffer dramatically. 2) Sounds of Speech (cont.) • Having fun with word sounds is a great way to play and learn at the same time. • Figuring out words that rhyme, coming up with words that share a beginning sound, and saying silly words all help build a child’s phonological awareness; that is, the ability to notice, think about, and play with sounds in words. • These skills will be used every time a young child reads. 3) Phonemic Awareness • Phonemic awareness is the ability to notice, think about, and work with the individual sounds in spoken words. • An example of how beginning readers show us they have phonemic awareness is combining or blending the separate sounds of a word to say the word ("/c/ /a/ /t/ - cat."). 3) Phonemic Awareness (cont.) • Phonemic awareness and phonics are not the same thing. • Phonemic awareness is the understanding that the sounds of spoken language work together to make words. • Phonics is the understanding that there is a relationship between letters and sounds through written language. • Children who cannot hear and work with the phonemes of spoken words will have a difficult time learning how to relate these phonemes to letters when they see them in written words. 4) Phonics • Children's reading development is dependent on their understanding of the alphabetic principle — the idea that letters and letter patterns represent the sounds of spoken language. • Learning that there are predictable relationships between sounds and letters allows children to apply these relationships to both familiar and unfamiliar words, and to begin to read with fluency. 4) Phonics (cont.) • Phonics instruction helps children learn the relationships between the letters of written language and the sounds of spoken language. • Children are taught, for example, that the letter n represents the sound /n/, and that it is the first letter in words, such as nose, nice and new. 5) Fluency • Fluency is the ability to read a text accurately, quickly, and with expression. Fluency is important because it provides a bridge between word recognition and comprehension. • When fluent readers read silently, they recognize words automatically. They group words quickly to help them gain meaning from what they read. • Fluent readers read aloud effortlessly and with expression. Their reading sounds natural, as if they are speaking. • Readers who have not yet developed fluency read slowly, word by word. Their oral reading is choppy. 5) Fluency (cont.) • Because fluent readers do not have to concentrate on decoding the words, they can focus their attention on what the text means. They can make connections among the ideas in the text and their background knowledge. In other words, fluent readers recognize words and comprehend at the same time (reading becomes automatic). • Less fluent readers, however, must focus their attention on figuring out the words, leaving them little attention for understanding the meaning of text. 6) Vocabulary • Vocabulary plays an important part in learning to read. • Beginning readers must use the words they hear orally to make sense of the words they see in print. • Kids who hear more words spoken at home learn more words and enter school with better vocabularies. • This larger vocabulary pays off exponentially as a child progresses through school. 6) Vocabulary (cont.) • Consider, for example, what happens when a beginning reader comes to the word ‘dig’ in a book. • As she begins to figure out the sounds represented by the letters d, i, g, the reader recognizes that the sounds make up a very familiar word that she has heard and said many times. • It is harder for a beginning reader to figure out words that are not already part of their speaking (oral) vocabulary. 6) Vocabulary (cont.) • Vocabulary also is very important to reading comprehension. • Readers cannot understand what they are reading without knowing what most of the words mean. • As children learn to read more advanced texts, they must learn the meaning of new words that are not part of their oral vocabulary. 7) Spelling • Many people think spelling comes naturally to some and not to others. Actually, good spellers aren't born, they're taught. • Learning to spell is built on a child's understanding that words are made up of separate speech sounds (phonemes) and that letters represent those sounds. • As they get more experience with words, children begin to notice patterns in the way letters are used as well as recurring sequences of letters that form syllables, word endings, word roots, prefixes, and suffixes. 7) Spelling (cont.) • Nearly 90 percent of English words can be spelled if you know the basic patterns, principles, and rules of spelling. Students can use these rules as an aid to spelling unknown words. • If a child can spell a word, he or she can usually read the word. Good spellers end up as better readers and writers. 8) Comprehension • Comprehension is the reason for reading. If readers can read the words but do not understand or connect to what they are reading, they are not really reading. • Good readers are both purposeful and active, and have the skills to absorb what they read, analyze it, make sense of it, and make it their own. 8) Comprehension (cont.) • Strong readers think actively as they read. They use their experiences and knowledge of the world, vocabulary, language structure, and reading strategies to make sense of the text and know how to get the most out of it. • They know when they have problems with understanding and what thinking strategies to use to resolve these problems when they pop up. 9) Writing • A child's writing development parallels their development as a reader. • Print awareness develops in young children as a result of being read to by adults and having other literacy experiences. Part of print awareness is the realization that writing is created with instruments such as pens, pencils, crayons, and markers. • Children begin to imitate the writing that they see in the environment. What often starts as scribbling ends up being important clues to a child’s understanding that print carries meaning. TERIMA KASIH / THANK YOU www.upm.edu.my