Posts Tagged ‘Tammy Jones’

Purposeful Teaching: What Does it Look Like?

As educators we sit through endless sessions where presenters tell us what to expect in a high-quality literacy classroom.  We hear how as teachers we need to recognize that each student in our room develops on an individual time line and we must structure our day so that it is well-planned and executed to support students’ differences.  Of course this goal is to differentiate instruction.  We hear how we must move through the literacy block with modeling and thinking aloud to coaching students as they read and write.  We hear a lot of “talk” about what we need to do, but what we really want is someone to tell us what this looks like!   The best part of my job as an educational consultant is that I see high-quality literacy classrooms all the time.  I can’t tell you how many outstanding teachers I run into on a weekly basis!

Just recently, I was coaching in a school and I observed a teacher who was very purposeful in her teaching.  Her lessons were focused and explicit.  Her students were engaged.  I was so excited about the wonderful things going on in her classroom, I wanted to share a glimpse of what it “looked like.”  Below is an example of what went on during a particular day’s whole-group mini-lesson during Reading Workshop in a third grade classroom.

Reading Workshop Mini-Lesson

Candice knows that making inferences has been very difficult for some of her students.  She has decided to focus her attention with explicit instruction around this comprehension strategy.  To begin the lesson, Candice asks the students just to listen and see if they can figure out what has happened.  Candice then says, “Robins have built a nest in a tree beside Harrison’s window, and the mother has been sitting on the nest for weeks.  This morning, when Harrison left for school, he heard little chirping noises coming from the nest in the tree.”  Candice then asks,  What could you infer, or figure out, about what happened?  She asks students to turn to a partner and share their inferences.  After a few students have shared their inferences, Candice explains that when you make an inference, you use one or two clues or pieces of evidence to state a fact.

Next, to guide practice, Candice displays on her smartboard, a picture of a boy standing in front of some spring flowers and blossoming bushes holding a tissue looking like he is about to sneeze. Candice then asks her class to make an inference about the picture.  She asks them to tell what kinds of information in the photo helped them make an inference about why the boy is sneezing.

Now, that the students have the concept of what an inference is, Candice moves the strategy to text.  She displays a text and a picture. on her smartboard.  They read the passage together. Candice encourages them to make inferences about the traits, feelings, and relationships of the characters in the passage, and to identify the clues that support the inferences.  As they work through the passage together, they use the highlighter tools and other resources to annotate the text.  As the lesson concludes, Candice reminds the students to find places in the texts that they are reading and mark the inferences that they are making with a sticky note.

Reading Workshop Debriefing

As Candice reconvenes the whole-group meeting, the students bring reading logs and share the evidence of independent work.  Candice uses this setting to assess the students’ learning.

Even though her mini-lesson did not last very long, the students left with a deeper knowledge of making inferences.  Many times we believe the longer the lesson the more students will learn, but in reality it is a balance of modeling (mini-lesson) and time for students to transfer this information during their instructional (small group) and independent reading time.  The real power lies in what students are able to take away from the lesson and use on their own!

Phonics and Teaching for Automaticity

Why do we teach phonics? Most teachers will answer “for decoding purposes,” “for children to learn sound/symbol relationships,” “It is the foundation for reading,” etc. While these reasons may be accurate, the main reason we teach phonics is so that students are automatic with the orthographic processing system. The ultimate goal is for students to transfer this knowledge to reading and writing so that comprehension and fluency are maintained. It is important to remember that skilled readers automatically and quickly recognize words they read. When proficient readers try to unlock unfamiliar words, they try some quick problem-solving strategies based on their understanding of language and their knowledge of sound/symbol relationships and how words work. They can pick and use these strategies quickly because they have practiced them many times and can be flexible as they encounter unfamiliar words.

As soon as students have acquired some strategies for comparing letters, these strategies can be used to analyze the visual features of words. At the direction of the brain, the eyes search the word for distinguishable features—or known parts—which may or may not be associated with the entire word. Instead of searching for individual letter/sound categories (which is a slow process), the brain searches among its collection of logical word parts that can be used to problem-solve the unknown word. For example, if the unknown word is “stack,” and the brain has a category for words that start like “stop” and another category for words that end with “ack,” the brain integrates the visual information from these two known categories and responds with an appropriate choice for the unknown word. Searching five letter categories (s-t-a-c-k) individually is a much slower response. In Becoming Literate: The Construction of Inner Control (1991), Clay describes how “letter analysis is slow, requires more learning, allows for more error and is more difficult to re-instate as a word.” Rather, children need to notice larger chunks of information: “the larger the pronounceable units a child can discover and use, the less learning effort will be required.”

Watch the following video.  Sandra the teacher encourages her Kindergarten classroom to learn consonant and short vowels at an automatic level by making sure that they know the following:

  1. The name of the letter
  2. The sound of the letter
  3. A word that starts with the letter
  4. How to write the letter

Video: Sound/Symbol Relationship

For more information, visit:

Phonics: Sound Symbol Relationships

Developing Phonetic Skills

Where does phonics instruction fit into a balanced approach to literacy? Recently a great deal of attention has been focused on the teaching of phonics in the elementary grades. Good teachers have always taught phonics. A student cannot learn to read without attending to letters and sounds.

There are numerous examples of how teachers use phonetic activities during reading and writing. For instance: during assisted writing, students use ABC charts, magnetic letters, and practice boards to learn about letters, sounds, and words. While writing independently, students analyze the sequence of sounds within words and apply strategies for noting relationships between spelling patterns. To complement this learning, the teacher addresses phonetic skills during group and individual conferences. The teacher also prompts the students to locate, predict, confirm, and search for visual information while reading. All these activities occur within the context of meaningful reading and writing. In the process, students learn how to transfer their knowledge about letters, sounds, and words across varied and changing circumstances.

This brings up a second question: do we teach phonics in isolation? Well, it depends on how you define isolation. Learning about letters, sounds, and words is a strategic process, rather than memorization or drill. Thus we structure learning opportunities that focus on categorization, comparison, integration, and analysis of graphophonemic information. At the same time, we provide students with varied experiences that promote automatic and flexible control of letters and words. Although some of the information is presented in isolation from the text, it is always based on the knowledge, skills, and strategies that the students bring to the task. As a result, the activities reinforce, link, and expand students’ learning through manipulation and exploration.

Learning About Letters and Sounds
It is a mistake to think that because students know the names of letters that they will be successful readers. As teachers, we encounter students every day who can identify all the letters but are unable to read even the most simple text. Phonemic awareness, not letter knowledge, is a strong predictor of children’s ability to read (Adams 1996). Yet knowing the names of letters is valuable because the names are labels for associating specific letters with their sounds. However, children do not have to know all the letters or sounds before they can begin to read (Clay 1991; Smith 1994).

As students develop letter knowledge, the teacher provides them with opportunities to learn the sound of the letter and how to construct the letter form. The process of learning letters, sounds, and graphic formations concurrently provides students with alternative feedback for checking and confirming each sensory system. Teachers enable students to access knowledge from various categories, thus strengthening the interconnections between related information. This type of support allows students to become flexible with letters. They begin to recognize and use letters in a variety of situations (not only in isolation) Obviously, phonics instruction is a critical component of a balanced literacy program. The difference from some traditional programs is the delivery of instruction!

Check back in a few days to see a more information on phonics instruction and view a video clip of phonics in action.

Phonics Support Sites you may want to check out:
PBD Kids Letter Games
Starfall
Primary Games
ABC Books
Sight Word Books
Phonics Resources