Humble ISD – Summer School 2013
K-2 Considerations
When planning for summer accelerated instruction, review student data then determine target(s) for instruction (phonological awareness, phonics, comprehension/vocabulary and fluency).
Phonological Awareness / PhonicsThings to think about /
- Lessons should be used to develop oral language as well as to help children think about the sounds in words.
- Consider where students are on the Phonological Awareness Continuum.
- Group students with similar needs together for small-group instruction.
- Lessons should be brief.
- Use pictures with familiar objects and events so that students can easily attend to the task (rhyming, syllables, beginning and ending sounds etc.)
- Phonics instruction should not always be taught in isolation but combined with meaningful text reading.
- When reading, students should use the text illustrations for checking to make sure the word looks right, sounds right and makes sense.
- Plan for word work during Guided Reading.
- Look for students using letter sounds in both reading and writing and continued opportunities to link the learning.
- Giving students the opportunity to share the pen (Interactive Writing) can help them learn to apply what they know about phonics.
- Word sorts are good for any phonetic pattern being studied.
Resources /
- Phonemic Awareness in Young Children (Adams, Foorman, Lundberg, Beeler)
- Ladders to Literacy (O’Connor, Notari-Syverson, Vadasy)
- Making the Most of Small GroupsDebbie Diller (Ch. 6, Phonemic Awareness pg. 87, App, E pg. 192-204)
- Making the Most of Small Groups (Debbie Diller (Ch. 7, Phonics pg. 114, appendix F pg. 205-212)
- Phonics Lessons-Letters, Words, and How They Work (Fountas & Pinnell)
- Suggestions for word/picture sorts are included
- HISD Phonics & Spelling/Vocab pacing guides
- Continuum of Literacy Learning K-8 (Fountas & Pinnell)
- Planning for Word Work during Guided Reading
- Thinking within the Text-Solving Words and Monitoring and Correcting
- Words Sorts
- CD houses the one-page sorts for the “shaded” grade level targets sorts
- Words Their Way – Word sorts by developmental stages (Letter Name)
Continuing Student Practice / Literacy Work Stations
- Make a recording with words that start the same and are easy to draw.
- Names Work Station: from photos students clap the syllables, sort by the number of syllables or do the same but with number of sounds in the name, sort by beginning or ending sounds.
- Use picture cards and sound boxes with counters to say words and push the counters into the boxes to represent each sound.
- Big Book or Poetry Work Station: task cards used to find the phonics elements being studied
- Word Study Work Station: hands-on materials (letter tiles, magnetic letters etc.) used to blends sounds to make words.
- Words Sorts by phonics pattern in a pocket chart.
- Computer Work Station: Use computer programs related to phonics elements students are studying in whole or small group.
Comprehension/Vocabulary / Fluency
Things to think about / To become proficient readers students must:
- Spend large amounts of time reading and thinking in text they can and want to read (Independent Reading)
- Set up a classroom library and help students choose just right books.
- In reading conference with an individual child, be sure the text is one that he can read with understanding and fluency on his own.
- Have extensive opportunities to respond to their reading through writing, talking (Turn &Talk and collaborative work), and drawing. (Interactive Reading, Independent Reading, Guided and Shared reading.)
- Receive explicit instruction in using strategies as tools for decoding and comprehension (Interactive Reading, Guided and Shared Reading.)
- Have a teacher
- modeling how to think at a deeper level what was read using quality literature that provokes thinking.
- using quality questioning to push kids’ thinking deeper.
- ask questions that include the words why, what made you think of that, and how do you know.
- Give students opportunities to read and use strategies with text at their level and the teacher right there.
- Notice how your students think or problem solve through the text-how they solve words, notice and correct errors, use the meaning, language, and print information (does it look right, sound right, make sense.)
- Every guided reading lesson should includea specific focus stated and/or modeled, a retelling, and specific teaching points at the end that highlights the specific focus (I noticed when Jon got to a hard part he….)
- Vocabulary has a huge influence on students’ comprehension. Comprehension and vocabulary can be focused on simultaneously. Teachers may directly teach
- and introduce words before reading if they are needed to understand the text.
- vocabulary words during reading if the student can’t figure out the meaning, even with prompting (searching picture and reading words before and after.)
- vocabulary words after reading if the students found new words but didn’t know their meanings.
- Fluency is a combination of rat or speed, prosody or phrasing, expression, intonation, and pacing-along with comprehension.
- Consider what’s getting in the way
- Decoding-students must be able to decode accurately to gain fluency.
- Automaticity in word recognition-students should effortlessly recognize the words they see in print.
- Interpretive and meaningful reading-it should sound expressive and phrased, and include good pacing and pauses where appropriate.
- Link to whole group instruction (shared reading, reader’s theater, and read-aloud) as well as small group.
Resources
Consider differentiated lessons from these resources. /
- Making the Most of Small Groups (Debbie Diller (Ch. 4, Comprehension pg. 35, Appendix C pg. 175)
- Interactive Read-Alouds (Linda Hoyt)
- Reading With Meaning (Debbie Miller)
- On Solid Ground (Sharon Taberski)
- Continuum of Literacy Learning K-8 (Fountas & Pinnell)
- Thinking within the Text
- Thinking beyond the Text
- Thinking about the Text
- Strategies That Work ( Harvey and Goudvis)
- Prompting Guide (Fountas & Pinnell)
- Making the Most of Small Groups (Debbie Diller (Ch. 5, Fluencypg. 165, Appendix D pg. 182)
- Continuum of Literacy Learning K-8 (Fountas & Pinnell)
- The Fluent Reader (Tim Rasinski)
Continuing Student Practice / Literacy Work Stations/Independent Work
- Classroom Library: independent/Just Right reading
- Listening Work Station: listen to and comprehend a recorded story, informational piece, or poem.
- Poetry Work Station: read and illustrate a poem.
- Big Book Work Station: dramatize the Big Book.
- Buddy Reading Work Station: partners read a bit at a time, then talk about it; help each other figure out the meaning.
- Buddy reading-give each other feedback on fluency
- Familiar reading
- Word Study-games with high-frequency words
- Audio books-follow/read along
- Big books-familiar/easy text