Term
Reading Rate Norms by Grade Level
1st - 60wpm
2nd - 70wpm
3rd - 90wpm
4th - 120wpm
5th - 150wpm
6th - 160wpm |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Grapheme: written representation of a phoneme; /b/. (think: graphics)
Morpheme: smallest unit of meaning (think "s" in books)
Phoneme: smallest unit of speech (/t/ in took changes to hook when a /h/ is replaced) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Phonemic Awareness: awareness of sounds that make up spoken words. provides some understanding that words are made up of sounds/phonemes. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Blend: 2+ consonants that each retain their own sound/phoneme
Digraph: combo of 2 letters (consonants or vowels) representing a single speech sound
Dipthong: sound formed by combo of 2 vowels; sound begins as one vowel and moves toward another (coin) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Cueing Systems:
*Semantics: Does that word make sense?
*Syntax (syntactical/structural): Does that word sound right in the sentence, grammatically?
*Grapho-phonemic (visual/letter-sound correspondence): Sound it out! Does it look like "sat" or "sitting"? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Analytic/Deductive Phonics: whole-to-part approach to word study. 1st teach sight words, then relevant phonic generalizations.
Synthetic Phonics: part-to-whole approach to reading. Word parts as sounds/syllables, and later combining them into words. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Orthographic: art/study of correct spelling according to established usage. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Comprehension Levels (lower to higher order):
Literal
Inferential
Analyitical
Evaluative |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Reading Levels via Running Records
Independent: 95-100%
Instructional: 90-94%
Frustration: 89% or lower |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
ă =short vowel sound (same as two dots above letter)
- = macron (long vowel)
(upside down 'e') = schwa (makes the "uh" sound) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Phonogram: graphic character that represents a phonetic sound/phoneme/word
Think: Sound=OY Phonogram=oy,oi |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Explicit Instruction: GRR (model, scaffold, release, feedback!) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Phonics: this teaching stresses symbol-sound relationships (used most often in beginning instruction). Also refers to correspondence of sounds to the letters representing themm.
|
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Phonic Analysis: the ID of words by their sounds
Structural/Morphemic Analysis: the ID of word-meaning elements to help understand meaning of a word as a whole |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Morphology: study of structure/forms of words (derivation, inflection, roots, combining forms)
Syntax: study of the way sentences are formed/grammaticl rules that govern their function. Examines the various ways words can be combined to create meaning. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Stages of Spelling Development
1. Emergent spelling (3-5yo): some concepts of print/letter-sound correspondence, adjflkdjflk=eagle
2. Letter-Name Alphabetic spelling (6-8yo): D=dog, KE=cookie. Some CVCs, alphabetic principle, consonant blends/digraphs
3. W/in Word Pattern Spelling (7-9yo):long vowel, R-controlled, dipthongs, may confuse 'gril' for 'girl'/'mete' for meet, start learning about -dge/-tch
4. Syllables and Affixes Spelling (9-11yo): inflectional endings (-s,-ed, -ing), homophones, "drop the y and add -ies)
5. Derivational Relations Spelling (11-14yo): explore relationship btwn spelling and meaning (etymology), greek/latin roots, vowel alternations (please->pleasant) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
1. Precommunicative: use letters for spelling words, but are just "babble". adlkfdlk=eagle
2. Semiphonetic: know letters represent sounds. E=eagle; A=eighty
3. Phonetic: spell words like they sound. EGL=eagle; ATE=eighty
4. Transitional: think about how words appear visually/has that visual memory of what words look like. exhibits conventions of English orthography. vowels in every syllable, e-marker, vowel digraph patterns, freq't English letter sequences. EGIL=eagle; EIGHTEE=eighty
5. Conventional: develops over years of word study and writing. Spelling can now be categorized by grade level words. |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Intonation - raising or lowering your voice to fit the text.
Ex. but when I do it, YOU get MAD!
Inflection - raising your voice when appropriate in text
Ex. You there? vs You, there. (raised higher at end to show it is a question) |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
5 RICA Domains
1. Planning/Organizing/Managing Reading Instruction based on Ongoing Assessment
2. Word Analysis
3. Flunency
4. Vocab, Academic Language, and Background Knowledge
5. Comprehension |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Case Study:
Based on_____(data), I recommend______(instruction).
I recommend______(instructional strategy) because______(justification). |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Case Study:
1. ID strengths and weaknesses
2. Recommend explicit, systematic instruction, strategies, and/or activities
3. Differentiate to each learners' needs |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Domains:
1. Planning/Organizing/Managing Reading Instruction based upon ongoing (formative) assessment
2. Word Analysis
3. Fluency
4. Vocab, Academic Language, Background Knowledge
5. Comprehension |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
****Buzzwords****
~Explicit, systematic instruction (is planned, daily, starts off simple and builds to more complex)
~Flexible, small groups |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
|
Definition
(not complete)
Table of Contents, index, heading, bold print, bullet points, photos, captions, labels, graphs, glossary, map, timeline |
|
|