Showing posts with label Word Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Word Work. Show all posts

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Teaching Word Work in Guided Reading

As an upper grades teacher, there were a few times in my career that I wanted to cry. One of these times was when I worked with fourth grade students who lacked basic decoding skills in a very serious way. I remember trying to figure out how to address their needs when they were the only kids in my class who needed it.

At that point, I added a short word work component to my guided reading lesson every day. Using the strategies below, I worked on decoding skills with the kids who needed them the most.



Adding Strategies to Students' Toolboxes During Guided Reading

Our goal for decoding instruction is that students will decode words accurately without our support. It's instinctive (and helpful, at first) to prompt students through unknown words. But, if every time they encounter a word they don't know, we prompt them on how to figure it out, they may be waiting for us to tell them what to do!

I know, they're sneaky.

So what we want to do is build their toolbox by adding strategies one at a time. This is the sequence I follow to introduce and develop decoding strategies during guided reading.



1. I choose a strategy students don't seem to have yet for decoding words. This could be reading words that follow a pattern. In this example, it's words that end in -ould.

2. I choose a book that includes opportunities for students to practice that pattern.


3. I explicitly teach using the strategy before I introduce the book. I name the strategy, explain it, and we practice using the strategy with a few words.


4. I write it on a mini-sentence strip and put it on the middle of the table, in front of students. They begin reading. As they get to an opportunity to practice the strategy that I just taught them, I wait to see if they will use it. If they don't, I ask, "What strategy can you use to read that word?" They usually stare for a second, and then point to the strategy. I read it out loud and say, "Now try it." If they need reteaching, I do that right away. Then they try it and we move on.

5. After a few lessons, when students seem to be able to use the strategy well, I put the mini sentence-strip in a little pocket chart behind the guided reading table. As students encounter words in future guided reading lessons, if they don't seem to know where to go, I ask them," Which strategy will you use?" They can choose the appropriate one from the chart.


This method has served to build independence in my readers! I hope it helps you, too!

Below are four different strategies to teach about decoding.

Word Families or Pattern Words

Students should be able to read words that follow patterns or are part of word families. To help students identify these quickly, choose a word family that pops up in your guided reading book a lot (ideally one that students need to practice because they don't read it accurately). Brainstorm words with different onsets and the same word family. As students read, have them hunt for that word family throughout the book.

 

Sight Word & High Frequency Word Automaticity

Sight words don't follow decodable patterns. The rules might not work. High-frequency words are words that pop up in reading frequently. They need to be instantly recognized as well.

To help students identify them immediately, write sight words on index cards and hole-punch them. Put them on a binder ring. Students can practice the rules every time they arrive in your guided reading group, for a minute or two to build their automaticity.


Using different vowel sounds

Our most struggling readers often use the same vowel sounds every time. Whenever they see an "a", the word is "cap" whether it ends with an "e" or not! Teaching students that vowels make different sounds in different words is important.

In this example, we worked on the vowel teams - ow as in plow and ow as in snow. We sorted words on cards based on the sound and built a list of words for each vowel sound. I chose a book carefully for guided reading that included those vowel sounds so students could practice immediately.


Recognizing Academic Language in Text

When students read content area texts, like science, social studies, or math, they encounter a lot of content area vocabulary! To help get their brains ready to identify those content area words, before we read that kind of text, we do a little word prediction map.

In the middle, I put the topic we expect to read about in that book (we predict the topic based on title & features before we read). Then we brainstorm all the words and phrases we might see in the book as we read. It helps students get their brains focused on the associated vocabulary and they are more likely to identify it if we've verbally discussed it and they've seen it in writing beforehand.

 
How do you teach decoding skills? 
 
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Monday, October 27, 2014

November Math and Literacy Centers and Stations: Fun Turkey Themes!

Are you a planner? Are you completely ready for November? Well, good for you. Go to some other blog where they're already hand-crafting their own Christmas decorations. Because this is not that kind of blog. I'm just cutting out some stuff for November! These are two of my math and literacy stations that are perfect for this time of year!


In this activity, students have to work out the multiplication problems on the pumpkins. They round the answers to the nearest hundred and sort them into products that round to 100, 200, 300, or 400! 


The entire Turkey Time Math Centers set includes the above activity, a multiplication roll and color center, fact family matching activity, word problems, and arrays. Every activity includes an answer sheet and answer key! Grab it at TPT for only $3.00!


This is from my Gobbling Up Words Word Work centers. In this center, kids read the words on the cards and sort them into one, two, or three-syllable words.


The rest of the Gobbling Up Words Word Work Center set includes a fun Old Maid-type game called Old Crow to practice plural nouns, a compound word building activity, and a sight word choose & color center. Everything is in a fun Thanksgiving theme! Recording sheets are included!

You can get this at TPT for only $3.00 too! For just $6.00, all of your math and literacy stations can be taken care of for November!
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Saturday, April 5, 2014

Using context clues effectively: not as easy as it sounds!

As adults, we have a fairly good vocabulary and often a pretty good intuition about what unknown words mean. We know which words are important to our understanding and which words are not so necessary. We an tell if a word has a positive or negative connotation from reading around it and gathering clues about the tone. We do lots of things naturally that help us not only figure out the meaning of unknown words, but understand how they relate to the words around them.
Kids.... not so much.
When we ask a child to use "context clues", most of the time they have no clue what we're talking about. Really take a minute and ask your students, "What are context clues?" and see what they say. It's enlightening and depressing all at the same time.
If kids are going to perform this very complex and sophisticated task of determining the meaning of unknown words, we have to help them understand a few things about how words relate to each other in a sentence, and how to use that to determine word meaning.
Introducing the Strategy
This is why I put together the Four Questions.

1. What job does the word do in the sentence?
Does it describe another word? Show you how something is done? Name an object?

2. What part of speech is the word?
If it names an object, it's a noun. If it describes a noun, it's an adjective. If it shows an action, it's a verb.

3. Which other words tell you about the word?
If the word is describing something, what do we know about that thing? If it's a verb, what is happening?
4. What word has a similar meaning to the word?
Are there words that would match the meaning of the word in that sentence, and relate to the other words in the same way?
There are a few variations of these questions, depending on what kids need. But as we worked with kids on using these four questions, we realized that something was missing - the big picture. In order to help students get a better idea of the context of the paragraph or story/article, we decided to zoom out and sketch what was happening at the time that word was introduced. We required the kids to use exact details in the paragraph.
One of my fifth grade teachers created this context clues mat to help students use the questions and a quick sketch to determine the meaning of unknown words.
The sketch really helped students determine the actual context of the word. If the word is "brush" and the context is describing a park with trees, bushes, and grass, the word "brush" is probably not going to mean "a tool with a handle and bristles". It's going to match the context, and mean "a clump of bushes."
Partner Practice & Guided Practice
To support this idea, and give kids practice with using context clues purposefully, I created some tools, such as task cards. One of my colleagues used them in her fourth grade classroom and really liked the focused, repetitious use of the strategy.

Students were placed in partners or threes to use the task cards.


After they read the paragraph on the card, they used a recording sheet with the questions on it to help them determine the meaning of the unknown word.


The hardest part was identifying the part of speech - this is unfortunately a difficult skill for our students. Relating it to the job the word does in the sentence was especially helpful.


While other students were working in teams or three, or partners, the teacher pulled over a small group of students who struggled with this skill and coached them through using the cards to practice their context clues.

Application to Test-Taking
Isn't this the hard part? We can have kids who verbalize and write about words very well, but when it is applied to a test-taking situation, they don't know how to transfer that learning. One of my fifth grade teachers made this chart with his students to reinforce the use of thinking through context clues in order to answer context clues-type test questions.
Using released tests and passages, the class identified three types of context clue-type questions. 
1. Figure out the meaning of the unknown word.
2. Match the dictionary meaning of a multiple-meaning word
3. Find a synonym or replacement word.
By isolating the questions they will see and how to use the strategy, students will be better prepared to use context clues in real reading as well as test-taking. 
If you'd like to try out the context clues task cards with your kids, just visit my TPT Store: Buzzing with Ms. B and check out the Reading Skills Pack: Context Clues.
What do you do to teach context clues?
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Friday, August 16, 2013

Reader's Workshop MiniSeries: Episode Six: Word Study *Freebie!


It's Episode 6 of my Reader's Workshop miniseries! Word study is an essential and often neglected component of our reading program.




Word study can be integrated into your daily reading program, but I find that having a special time for word study ensures that I will explicitly teach the kinds of things that need to be taught explicitly. I set up a notebook and try to teach word study skills in context. I usually use poems. Some poems I've written myself in order to address specific skills. Others came from these sources:


On Monday, kids glue the poem into their notebooks. We identify the pattern in the words used in the poem (for example, scr blend, /ou/ vowel team, re- prefix). Students mark up the poem to notate the word pattern. Throughout the week, we work with the words, creating lists using the pattern, manipulate the words, or work with other word patterns we find in the poem. On Friday, we write our own version using the poem as a model. Very fun.


Later, I put the poem on an easel, and students can mark it up with dry erase markers.

 These are the kinds of things I teach during a third or fourth grade word study. 

Phonics Skills
I know, the big kids should know them. But guess what: they don't! We still have a lot of kids in the upper grades who are missing this basic key to reading. 
Several years ago, I was blessed to participate in a short training given by our dyslexia teacher and our Literacy Leader. They provided us with some tools that could help our kids be successful. They shared blends, vowel teams, and syllable types with us that are necessary for student success in decoding. By third grade, kids have had several years of these. However, a lot of mine had missed the boat and needed more reinforcement, so I spent some time at the beginning of the year reviewing these necessary pieces of English code.



Everything that I had on the wall, the students had a tiny version glued into their notebooks. As we learned a new component of decoding, the kids colored their little version, and I colored the big one on the wall. I stuck them on the wall behind my guided reading table so students could reference them during guided reading.

You can get the blends chart from Carl's Corner.

Word Parts: Prefixes, Suffixes, and Root Words

For this kind of word study, I follow a similar structure as I do with phonics. We identify the prefix, determine meanings, and make lists of words. But then we do some dictionary work and identify how the word part changes the meaning of base words. 
We add the words to our anchor charts and kids can add more to this chart as the year goes on.
This word map freebie can help your kids explore the uses of word parts. Grab it free at TPT!



Context Clues



Understanding the meaning of unknown words is such a difficult task for kids. They don't always know where to look for clues, and even if they've found them, they don't always know what to do with them! So working on determining word meanings is a very important skill. 
In case you're looking for some tools to help your kids with context clues, check out my Reading Skills Pack: Context Clues at TPT. 

To help you get your Reader's Workshop ready & rolling, here's a seven-page Reader's Workshop Freebie Sampler from my Rolling Out Reader's Workshop!

Check out the other "episodes" in the Reader's Workshop MiniSeries:


For my complete Reader's Workshop Pack, visit my TPT store!


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Saturday, August 3, 2013

Reader's Workshop MiniSeries, Episode One: Scheduling Your Day *Freebie!


Today is the first installment of my Reader's Workshop MiniSeries! It'll run until August 17, and all freebies will be available on TPT! Check back to make sure you don't miss a piece!


Scheduling is one of the biggest challenges teachers face, in my opinion. You have 1,000 things to do and when someone adds a new one in, they tell you, "It'll just take ten minutes a day!" As if you have ten minutes a day where you and your kids all sit and stare at each other. Now you know what to do with all that down time! Right.
So every minute has to count. 
Schools have different amounts of time that they allot for each subject. It really irks me when schools give you 90 minutes and call it "Language Arts." That means that all the intricacies of Reading and Writing are being crammed into 90 minutes. It's beyond me!
So ideally, you'd have 90 minutes for reading and another, special, dedicated writing time. (Don't misunderstand me: I believe in integrating; I just don't believe in replacing one with the other because you're short on time!)
I included certain components daily in my Reader's Workshop block, and this is what I recommend to my teachers. 
Word Study

Word Study was not always included as a part of Reader's Workshop. However, kids need this time to work with reading skills so they can later apply them in their reading.

During this time, we worked with all of our word-study standards. This is not spelling. This is dedicated time for working with word patterns and parts, as well as decoding and word meaning skills. Prefixes, suffixes, root words, vowel teams, context clues, synonyms, antonyms, and dictionary skills all belong in this time. 
I spent fifteen minutes daily, and students had a special Word Study Notebook. For more about Word Study, check out Episode 6: August 15.
Read Aloud
One of my favorite read alouds for the beginning of the year.

The Read Aloud is one of the most challenging pieces for me to fit into my upper elementary reading block. It seems like it frequently takes a back burner, with all of the challenges we face with scheduling. However, it is important because it is an opportunity for several important things to happen:

1. It helps expose kids to books they wouldn't normally read, include genres and levels of difficulty.
2. Teachers can model reading comprehension strategies that they want their students to learn.
3. Students can verbalize their responses without the hindrance of a low reading level.
I spent fifteen minutes daily (on my best days!), on the carpet. 
For more on read alouds, check out the Episode 3 : Read Alouds on August 8. 
Shared Reading


Shared Reading is an important time for me. During this time, each student has a copy of the text (or somehow has access to the text, whether it is on a chart, projector, etc.). The text can be a picture book, chapter book, article, poem, etc. I use the genre of instruction in our scope & sequence.
Shared reading, for me, includes a text, questioning, responding, and often charting. I also embed my minilesson here. I know that might sound odd, but I have never had success with the 15 minute minilesson. It may work well for many, but personally, I needed more time to interact with the text and the kids. So my shared reading time is usually 25 or so minutes long, includes a minilesson (or as I call it, strategy focus), and students have opportunities to share their responses verbally and in writing in their reader's notebooks. 
For more on shared reading, check out the Episode 4: Shared Reading on August 10.
Independent Reading/Guided Reading

This is the most important time for the kids. During this time, students have to practice the strategy we worked on during Shared Reading. I usually provide a response structure or sentence starter for students to respond to after they've read, or during their reading time. Students read independently in a text they chose (with supervision) and respond in their notebooks. 
I am seated at the guided reading table and I work with two small groups a day. This requires a very tight schedule, and an eye on the clock! Each guided reading group can be 18 minutes long, and students know that, when the bell rings, the groups change. 
To help you get your Reader's Workshop ready & rolling, here's a seven-page Reader's Workshop Freebie Sampler from my Rolling Out Reader's Workshop!
And don't forget to check back for the next episode of my Reader's Workshop MiniSeries!


For my complete Reader's Workshop Pack, visit my TPT store!
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Sunday, September 9, 2012

Praying for fall

I am so sick of summer. I am tired of 100 degree days. It is September, and somebody should tell the weather that.

On Friday, our school went to watch the parade. What parade? you ask. Our feeder pattern high school homecoming parade, which is always the first homecoming event of the district because this school is the oldest in the district; established 1927. This means it happens very early in the football season, aka the second week of school.

The problem with attending a homecoming parade in a desert in early September, even if it is at 9:00 in the morning, is that it is hot. Incredibly hot. It was around 90 degrees and continued to climb. We stood on the side of the street and the children shouted for candy.

"Candy! Candy!" they shouted at the passing cars.
"Candy! Candy!" they shouted at the passing cheerleaders.
"Candy! Candy!" they shouted at the passing horse.

Some of the time, they actually got candy. That was an adventure in itself. The candy was tossed into the crowd of children. The children dove wildly and shoved the candy into their little ziploc bags. Then they continued shouting "candy" and sweating.

After about an hour of this, one of the sticky, sweating kids told me, "I wish they would throw water instead."

Me too, kid. Me, too.

The rest of the day was pretty gross, mostly because I felt like there was a layer of dried sweat in between me and my clothing. Ew.

The next day, though, a storm blew in and it has cooled off about 20 degrees or so. It is so much nicer. I can wear jeans without feeling like I'm going to pass out. It is lovely and beautiful and I just know it isn't going to last. 

In honor of me pretending that fall has begun even though I know it hasn't, I am sharing my Fall Word Work Pack with you. I will happily email this to the first ten people to follow my facebook and comment here! The pack is appropriate for second and third grade. Includes contractions matching, word family sorting, alphabetical order, and parts of speech in a cute fall theme.

So first ten commenters, follow my facebook, include your email address, and I'll send you my fall word work pack! 
And if you miss it, you can grab it at TPT or TN.


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Sunday, November 13, 2011

Reading Stations

I have never done stations before, because I taught fourth grade and I used the reader's workshop independent time to build stamina and strategy in their independent reading. But this year, with third graders(!) I have had to change things up! I have initiated eight stations. Please look at them, take what you want, and give me suggestions! Soon, I'll add pictures of the stations so you can see what they look like in the classroom!

You are welcome to any files linked here, but please oh please comment and tell me what you like and what you've downloaded! I would LOVE to know they have helped someone in their classroom!

Computers
I have two classroom computers. On the computers, kids listen to a fiction story from Storyline Online. Then, they fill out a graphic organizer (such as the one below) about the fiction story. These are all organizers we have used before. Sometimes I will use different maps or organizers to reinforce a concept we have learned during our shared reading, such as the Character Study Map from a previous post.

Fiction Story Map


Fiction Story Map - directions

Word Study
In the word study station, kids engage in different kinds of word work. So far, they have worked on identifying VC, CVC, CVCC, anc CCVC patterns in words they find in their independent reading book. I recently added a file folder game about R-controlled syllables, and next, I am going to add word ladders from Timothy Rasinski. We have practiced them as a whole class and students are excited to be able to manipulate words on their own in the stations.

Daily Word Ladders by Tim Rasinski

Sentence Building (Writing)
As a class, we have practiced using different parts of speech to create a basic sentence structure. We made a couple of foldables to practice these sentence structures (pictures to follow soon!). In the sentence building station, students practice creating a sentence using different parts of speech. There is a basket of bags. Each bag has a different part of speech in it (Nouns, Verbs, Adjectives, Articles, Adverbs, and Prepositions). Most of the cards I purchased from the Dollar Tree on little sentence strips. Students combine the cards (and fill in endings with a marker) to create a sentence. When they're done, they add the sentences in their Language Study Notebooks. Then they can make a foldable we have practiced.

Spelling
Students have weekly spelling words that follow several different patterns, as well as a few sight words they need to learn. For example, last week, patterns included -an, -am, -ance, and -ant. At the spelling station, students sort the words into patterns and then build the words with magnetic letters on the metal side of my teacher desk. If time permits, they then quiz each other on the words on dry erase boards.


Fiction Response
In the fiction response station, students read a fiction book together. I try to make sure the genre of the fiction book is the same as the one we are reading in our shared reading so students can connect to the structure and elements. After they are done reading, they discuss with a buddy about the questions on these cards.


Fiction Response Cards
Nonfiction Response
At the nonfiction station, kids preview, predict, and read an article together. Then they record information they learned on this organizer. I have been working on encouraging kids to use nonfiction features (captions, maps, diagrams, etc.) to learn information, so I included the "I learned this from..." line so they can indicate what feature they learned the fact from.

For the past couple weeks, we have been practicing identifying the 5Ws in nonfiction. To reinforce this in the station, I am adding this 5Ws cube (Idea from Amy Lemons: Step into Second Grade! I just modified the sides of the cube to include the cues we have talked about to remind us of the meaning of each 'W') Kids can roll the cube and answer the questions. To build the cube, leave tabs on the sides to glue together.


5Ws Cube


Poem (Fluency)
As a class, we have a poem that we read for fluency. (In the past, it's been a weekly poem, but it's stretching out to a couple of weeks this year.)We identify language conventions used in the poem and mark them in our language study notebooks. We practice these skills daily (including grammar, capitalization, punctuation, spelling patterns, etc.). At the poem station, I have a poster-sized laminated copy of the poem. Students read the poem with their partner with fluency. Then, using vis-a-vis, students mark nouns, verbs, words following syllable patterns we have learned, and interesting punctuation marks. Then students mark the same noticings on the copy of the poem in their language study notebooks.

School Library
Self-explanatory! Kids grab their library card and go to the library! They are reminded to use their three-finger rule to choose "just right" books.
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