Miss Tahira Assignement 2
Miss Tahira Assignement 2
Miss Tahira Assignement 2
1-Show printed material to your child and talk about the sounds and
structure of the words:
Research shows that letter/sound games help develop phonemic awareness. Here
are some game ideas:
Take turns thinking of a word. Have the adult and child work together to say
each sound in the word. Write down the word (adult or child) and say each
sound individually pointing to the letter(s) that make that sound.
Pick a word and take turns switching the first sound in the word to see how it
changes the word or switch the last sound to see how it changes the word and
sound (e.g., turn cat into bat or pop into pod).
Put letters on index cards (e.g., give your child a, t, and c and ask them to
arrange them into cat, and talk about each sound-you can do this with a variety
of words-rat, pot, bed, mat, etc.).
. For instance, auditory cues are in play when children are asked to clap the number
of syllables they hear in a spoken word. (Let’s clap the sounds in cat!)
Or you could use visual/tactile cues like blocks or chips to represent each sound in
a word (e.g., writing each sound or letter on each chip and seeing how you could
manipulate the chips to change the words or letters). How about making letters out
of play-doh and using those letters to create words, switch sounds around, etc.).
Kinesthetic cues are used when children jump as they repeat sounds, say a rhyming
word, or say each sound in a word. How about using your body to make letters
(give me a C, give me an A, give me a T!).
Model for your child how to clap the sounds or syllables in a word, jump while
saying letter sounds, or use playdown or blocks to manipulate or change words
around.
4 – Provide Early Writing Activities:. Let your child guess how to spell words. If
they are correct, talk about why. If they are incorrect, provide guidance on what
letters need to be changed and why.
If they can’t write letters yet, have them tell you what letters they think would
make up a word, or use magnetic letters, blocks or the computer to make words.
Show your child how to take your thoughts and put them on paper. Use simple
sentences like “I am hungry” or “I love cats!” I also love using dry erase boards for
writing practice!
5 – Practice at Home Before School Starts (if you didn’t do this it is okay-just
start practicing now):
Research shows that children who are frequently exposed to print and phonemic
awareness activities at home prior to starting school have higher levels of
phonemic awareness. Parents can model phonemic awareness by reading aloud to
their children, talking about the spelling, structure, and sounds in a word; showing
their child how to write a word while saying the sounds; or leading games that
incorporate letter and language play. Give your children opportunities to practice
early reading skills by talking, singing, rhyming, and playing guessing games.
We also know that many kids love the IPAD and do well with fun, interactive
computerized games! A great app to practice phonemic awareness is Kindergarten
Reading, Tracing, and Spelling-Learn to Read First Words School Adventure!
(Question no 3)
Design two activities to teach phonemic awareness?
(Question no 4)
Design an instructional plan to teach phonemic awareness?
Class:
Lesson Title: Phonemic Awareness – Beginning Sounds
Objective: To develop an awareness of the “sounds of English”(phonemes) and
practice picking out the beginning sound in simple words.
Activities:
Teacher demo – iPad plugged into interactive smartboard, or small groups. Oz
Phonics 1 App: Exercise 1 - Sound Match.
Students to play sound matching game.
Teacher to play oral game. The word ‘bed’ starts with the sound /b/, what other
words start with a /b/ ?
Teacher to play oral game asking class to guess the name of someone in the
class who starts with the sound /s/. “I’m thinking of a name and the name starts
with the sound /t/. Whose name is it?” There might be multiple answers in a
classroom.
Oz Phonics 1 App: Exercise 2 – Odd-One-out beginning sound. Teacher can
demonstrate in small groups or using interactive whiteboard to reflect iPad screen.
(Question no 5)
How will you assess the phonemic awareness?
What it measures?
1. Phoneme matching is the ability to identify words that begin with the same sound.
2. Phoneme isolation is the ability to isolate a single sound from within a word.
3. Phoneme blending is the ability to blend individual sounds into a word.
4. Phoneme segmentation is the ability to break a word into individual sounds.
5. Phoneme manipulation is the ability to modify, change, or move the individual
sounds in a word.
When should it be assessed?
Phonemic awareness assessments should be done three times during the
kindergarten and first grade years to help guide instruction.
Examples of assessment questions
* Remember, when a letter appears between slash marks, you should say the letter
sound, and not the letter name.
Phoneme matching
Which words sound alike? man, sat, sip (Correct response: sat, sip)
Phoneme isolation – Initial (first) sound:
What's the first sound in "sat?" (Correct response: /s/)