Classroom Practices For Supporting Early Literacy Instruction in tcrsb


Effective Techniques for Developing Letter Recognition



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Effective Techniques for Developing Letter Recognition:

  • The goal for Grade Primary is for each student to develop a comfortable familiarity with at least 15 letters.

(Trehearne, p. 46), but knowledge of the entire alphabet would be beneficial.

  • The majority of letter work should take place through shared reading (charts, big books, environmental print, and shared writing).

  • Interactive word wall activities are beneficial.

  • Intentional exposure to print (drawing students’ attention to print often and in many ways) is crucial.

  • Letter of the Week”, phonics sheets and letters taught in isolation are not recommended practices.

See Miriam Trehearne’s Kindergarten Teacher’s Resource Book pp. 46-62 for excellent ideas for developing Letter Recognition skills.

Grade Primary Writing Benchmarks


By Mid-Point in the Primary Year, 75% of Students Should:

By June of the Primary Year, 75% of Students

should:

  • Be able to write some letters of the alphabet using classroom resources such as word walls, alphabet charts, name tags etc.

  • Be able to write their own name

  • Be able to write some high frequency words (I, me, Dad, Mom, a, no, see)

  • Use letters and pictures to represent thoughts

  • Be able to label drawings using some known vocabulary

some environmental print

  • Retell what they wrote (what they think the writing says)

  • Start to represent beginning and ending consonants of unfamiliar words

  • Be able to write their own first and last name

  • Sometimes be able to write the names of their siblings, friends, pets

  • Write independently at least 15 simple words (I, me, you, my, and , the , mom, dad, a, cat, dog, like, love, no, yes,

in, look)

  • Start to understand the importance of word endings (ing, s)

  • Begin to understand how words work: “If I can spell like, I can spell bike.”

  • Write at least one sentence independently and read it

  • Represent beginning and ending consonants in words they recognize but do not yet know how to spell automatically

  • Start to place vowels in words and hear more dominant ones




  • Students should be writing from the first day of Primary.

  • Students’ reading and writing vocabularies are not necessarily the same.

  • Students should be taught from the first day how to use classroom resources such as word wall, alphabet chart, name tags, calendars, etc.

Word Study:

In grade Primary, word study is really the development of word awareness. This happens through oral word play and exposure to print.



Games and activities using word walls, morning message, and word matching will help to develop word awareness in very young students. Invented spelling should be encouraged.



Grade One
Indicators of Comprehension in Grade One:


  • Student creates sketches/drawings which reflect content of a text (characters, setting, an event). (visualizing)

  • Student writes short sentences that respond to text (e.g. a prediction, opinion, feeling, or any interesting aspect of the text). (inferring)

  • Student writes something in his/her own life when prompted by the text (connecting)

  • Student represents a character (with some detail) through drawing or writing (visualizing, determining importance, synthesizing)

  • Student infers how a character feels. (inferring)

  • Student remembers information from a text to produce lists, simple sequence of actions, and directions. (determining importance)

  • Student makes innovations to a text by changing events, characters, endings, settings. (synthesizing)

  • Student notices the way a text is written and models the style in his/her own writing. (synthesizing)


Grade One Reading Benchmarks


By Mid-Point of Grade One Students

Should:

By June of Grade One Students

Should:

  • Understand most concepts about print

  • Be able to read Levels F and G books

  • Recognize and name upper and lower case letters

  • Write most letters in correct direction and in standard form

  • Say words slowly, segmenting and blending sounds

  • Consistently match one-to-one

  • Hear and identify sounds in words, especially rhymes, syllables, and beginning and ending consonant sounds

  • Know most letter-sound associations for consonants and easy-to-hear vowel sounds

  • Recognize own name and names of most classmates

  • Have a core of known words (10-20) that they can read and write

  • Have knowledge of simple print conventions (end punctuation, capitals, commas)

  • Make approximations and use context and letter-sound associations to sample, predict and confirm

  • Begin to self-monitor and self-correct

  • Begin to read familiar texts confidently

  • Retell the message from visual and printed text

  • Use a variety of strategies to create meaning

  • Use some features of text to determine content, locate topics and obtain information

  • Understand concepts about print – words are made up of letters and defined by space; letters are in a consistent order in words; there are capital and small letters; words are arranged from left to right and from top to bottom**

  • Be able to read levels H and I books

  • Know all letter names, forms and related sounds

  • Hear syllables, rhymes, and sequences of sounds in words

  • Hear and write most sounds in words, including dominant and hard-to-hear consonants and vowel sounds

  • Recognize quickly and easily a large number of words, both high frequency(103+) and other words**

  • Spell 25 “No Excuses” words correctly across the curriculum

  • Write a large number of words (approximately 75-100) using conventional spelling**

  • Have knowledge of simple conventions of print

  • Use background knowledge to make connections to text

  • Self-monitor and self-correct

  • Select text appropriate to their interest and needs

  • Use a variety of strategies to create meaning (make inferences, identify character traits, follow written directions)

  • Use features of text to determine content, locate topics,

and obtain information

**See: Grades 1-2 Teacher’s Resource Book, Miriam Trehearne, pp. 264,272,

274, 278-289


TCRSB Instructional Reading Expectations

(Reading with 90-94% Accuracy)

Grade One

Important:


  1. These are instructional targets only. Not all students will reach these benchmarks with their classmates, but all students can learn to read.

  2. In order to make progress as readers, all students must receive reading instruction at their own instructional reading levels.

  3. During independent reading time, students read texts that are at their independent level (easy text).




Grade

One

November




February/March




May/June







F&P Levels RR Levels




F&P Levels

RR Levels




F&P Levels

RR Levels







D,E 5-6, 7-8




F,G

9-10, 11-12




H,I

13-14, 15-16





Suggested Guidelines for Grade One Reading Level Progression

(for reporting)
Please Note:

Teachers who choose to use these suggested guidelines need to consider the following:

The letter grade (A,B,C) is based on:

  1. The instructional reading level with comprehension

  2. The student’s demonstrated comfort with Grade One Reading Benchmarks

Both must be considered when assigning a grade.


Instructional Reading Level Expectations

Letter Grade

November

February/March

May/June


C



A-C


C-E


E-F


B



D-E


F-G


H-I


A



F-H


H-I


J-K

Students in Grade One have moved beyond patterned text and interact with text that carries a story. At this stage, it is important for teachers to understand the thinking process employed by students in order to determine whether readers are using visual cues, structural cues or meaning cues. Self-Monitoring Strategies should be evident.



Self-Monitoring Strategies

  • Ignored obvious errors

  • Paused/stopped

  • Repeated word(s)

  • Tried something else

  • Self-corrected

  • Self-corrected and re-read to confirm

  • Integrated cueing systems (m,s,v)






Does it make sense? Does it sound right? Does it look right?

Integrating the Cueing Systems

(Using meaning/structural/visual cues simultaneously and automatically

Meaning Cues:

Meaning cues relate to the reader’s ability to gather a book’s basic message by making meaning of it at the text, content, and word level. If readers are using meaning cues, they think about what they read. They check whether the sentence makes sense. If the student seems to be considering the story background, the information from the picture and the meaning in the sentence, then he/she is using meaning cues.


Structural Cues:

Readers who use structural cues rely on their knowledge of grammar and the structure of the language to make text sound right. Using this knowledge, readers check to see if the word or sentence sounds right. If the student makes errors which sound right considering the structure and syntax of the English language, then he/she is using structural cues.


Visual Cues:

Visual information includes the way letters and words look. Readers use their knowledge of the visual features of words and letters and then connect these features to their knowledge of the way words and letters sound when spoken. If the student makes errors which visually resemble the word in the text, (i.e. begins with the same letter) then the child is using visual cues.


Writing:

A comprehensive writing program in the grade one year should include attention to:



  • Modes of Writing: expressive, transactional, poetic

  • Forms of Writing: journals, stories, reports, logs, poems, procedural text, persuasive text, etc.

  • Traits of Writing: ideas, organization, voice, word choice, sentence fluency, conventions


T
The single most important thing you can do to help students become writers is to provide them with time to write, the materials with which to write and to demonstrate the process and importance of writing to them.

Allington and Cunningham


ime:


  • 30-40 minutes, daily


Components:
Mini Lesson:

Mini Lessons in the Grade One Writing Workshop focus on concepts like vocabulary development, letter and word recognition, conventions of print, as well as elements of form (e.g. this is how a story begins, a journal entry looks like this). Teachers are encouraged to use mentor texts at this time (picture books, charts, big books etc.)


M
Students do their best writing when they can choose what they are going to write and when there is real purpose for writing. However, within that choice students must be guided to do different types of writing. The purpose for the writing determines the type or mode used.

(Miriam Trehearne, p. 298)


odeled Writing:


  • The teacher holds the marker and demonstrates specific writing skills often using a chart.

  • Students learn that print is thoughts written down.

  • The teacher may demonstrate a particular form of writing.


Shared Writing:

  • The teacher holds the marker but the students contribute ideas.

  • The students learn that print is thoughts written down.

  • This is a perfect opportunity to model conventions of print, conventional spelling etc.


Interactive Writing:

  • The teacher shares the marker with the students as they construct text together.

  • Students may write individual letters, word parts, or whole words, while the teacher writes the rest.

  • The teacher has an opportunity to work with spacing, letter formations, upper and lower case letters, high frequency words, spelling strategies etc.

  • This provides a perfect vehicle for the teaching of the traits of writing


Guided Writing:

  • Students work in small groups on a common writing task.

  • The teacher groups students according to: form of writing, topic, interest, strengths/needs

  • Students support one another.

  • Teacher provides support as needed.

  • The teacher emphasizes “No Excuses” words and notices words that are spelled incorrectly, but places most value on content.


Independent Writing:

  • Students must write daily.

  • The use of invented spelling is important as this is how students develop and assess their knowledge of sound-symbol correspondence

  • Students work on writing pieces independently.

  • The teacher confers with students to work on specific skills.

  • The teacher emphasizes the value of the content, but notices “No Excuses” words and words which are spelled incorrectly.

  • The teacher collects evidence to inform future instruction.


Writing Share (Also known as Author’s Chair):

  • The author (student) brings an unfinished piece and tells the group where he/she needs help.

  • The author brings a finished piece and gets feedback to support revision.

  • This provides an excellent opportunity for the teacher to observe and assess speaking and listening skills.


For excellent ideas for Writing Workshop, see Grades 1-2 Teacher’s Handbook, Miriam Trehearne, Chapter 3



Word Study

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