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Best Practice in Spelling

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Often students are asked to memorise word lists for a test later on' in time. Memorisation is not the most efficient strategy for spelling instruction. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Best Practice in Spelling


1
Best Practice in Spelling
  • Methodologies which effectively teach students to
    be accurate spellers are combinations of
  • Phonemic spelling
  • Whole Word approach (Visual)
  • Morphemic spelling

2
Do we need to explicitly teach spelling?
  • List 3 reasons why you believe spelling should be
    explicitly taught at school.
  • Share your reasons with your neighbour
  • Add to your 3 reasons, one more from your
    neighbours list.

3
We should explicitly teach spelling because
  • The English language DOES conform to predictable
    patterns
  • Those patterns can be taught directly to
    students.
  • Collins, 1983
  • Dixon, 1991
  • Graham, 1999
  • Dixon and Engelmann, 2002

4
Phonemic Approach
  • Understanding the relationship between letters
    and their corresponding sounds is an important
    skill for successful reading and spelling
    performance.

5
  • Children (especially young children) have less
    difficulty spelling words that are based on
    predictable letter-sound relationships.

6
  • Teaching phonemic awareness has strong and
    significant effects on childrens reading and
    spelling skills, with those effects lasting well
    beyond the end of the teaching period.

7
example
  • the word hat has three sounds
  • /h/, /a/, and /t/
  • It can be correctly spelled using the three
    letters
  • (h, a, and t)
  • that correspond with each of those sounds.

8
  • Systematic phonics instruction boosts the
    spelling skills of
  • at-risk students
  • young developing readers
  • students from across the socio-economic spectrum,
    from low to high Socioeconomic backgrounds
  • (National Reading Panel, UK, 2000)

9
  • Students should have at least 1 year of
    instruction in a systematic phonics-based program
    to develop skills related to letter-sound
    correspondence.
  • This is most effective in the early years when
    students are building their capacity with written
    language and with reading skills.
  • http//www.fonetiks.org/foniks/1/pagessou/ii.html

10
Reflection
  • What are some of the key concepts addressed so
    far?
  • My personal convictions
  • The correlations I am prepared to make between my
    convictions and the new learnings
  • Aspects I need to explore further

11
Whole Word Approach
  • Not all words in the English language can be
    spelled correctly using letter-sound
    correspondence.

12
Irregularly spelled words
  • Examples of irregular words include the words
    yacht, straight, and friend
  • These words cannot be spelled correctly by
    applying a regular phonics approach.
  • To teach irregularly spelled words, a different
    instructional strategy is required.

13
However.
  • Whole-word approaches to spelling instruction
    have both
  • advantages
  • and disadvantages.

14
Advantages
  • Whole Word approach works well with words which
    do not conform to a regular spelling pattern.

15
  • In a typical Whole Word program, groupings of
    words are based on some similarity
  • Similar beginning sounds like
  • wh, th
  • Words belonging to a common theme
  • Word pools for a particular topic
  • Word groupings

16
Disadvantages
  • Often students are asked to memorise word lists
    for a test later on in time.
  • Memorisation is not the most efficient strategy
    for spelling instruction.
  • It should only be used to teach the spelling of
    words with extreme irregularity.

17
  • When students are given spelling lists they need
    to
  • be convinced that there is a purpose to learning
    the words on the list
  • Be given the skills to learn the words

18
  • Whole-word approaches to spelling have been
    shown to produce highly accurate spellers.
  • Add a Word program
  • Write-Say method

19
  • The Add-A-Word program increases overall
    spelling accuracy
  • It also increases the accurate spelling of
    journal words from a low of 0 to a high of over
    80 correct.
  • UK Research Pratt-Struthers et al., 1983-1993
  • Jan Turnbill-Brian Cambourne-University of
    Wollongong 1994

20
  • A second example of a whole-Word spelling program
    is the Write-Say method.
  • First, a student looks at a word.
  • Then, while touching each letter of the word, the
    student spells the word.
  • Next, the student covers the word so it is no
    longer visible.
  • The word is then written on a separate piece of
    paper.
  • Finally, the student uncovers the correctly
    spelled word and checks to see if he or she has
    copied it down correctly.

21
  • This method is particularly effective with
    students receiving special education.
  • It was found that it improved spelling accuracy
    of special education students by 34.9, in less
    than seven weeks.
  • Kearney and Drabman (1993)

22
A third example is irregular words in a whole
sentence approach
  • e.g I thought he was through.
  • At first the unpredictable letters or letter
    combinations are provided and students must fill
    in the missing letters (e.g., _ _ _ ough _ _ _ _
    a _ _ _ _ ough).
  • Gradually, the number of provided letters is
    decreased until students are able to spell all
    the words without visual prompts.
  • Once the sentence is learned, variations are
    presented so that students can apply the spelling
    of irregular words to various sentence contexts
    (e.g., She thought about her homework throughout
    the night.).

23
  • This method has been found very effective with
    Middle Years students.

24
  • The English language contains words with both
    regular and irregular spellings.
  • Both the phonemic and whole-word approaches are
    required to teach regularly or irregularly
    spelled words.

25
Reflection
  • Note two things you agree with
  • Note two things you dispute or would like
    clarification on
  • Note something you would like to explore further

26
Morphemic Approach
  • A morphograph is the smallest unit of
    identifiable meaning in written English.
  • Morphographs include prefixes, suffixes, and
    bases or roots.

27
  • Following a small set of rules for combining
    morphographs can create many words in the written
    English language.
  • For example, the word recovered is made up of the
    prefix re, the base cover, and the suffix ed.

28
Example
  • Using a morphemic approach, students can be
    taught that when a base ends in the letter e
    (e.g., make) and is to be combined with the /ing/
    suffix, the letter e is always dropped (make
    becomes making).

29
  • The morphemic approach to spelling instruction
    offers several advantages.

30
First
  • Morphographs are generally spelled the same
    across different words.
  • For example, the morphograph port is spelled the
    same in the words porter, deport, and important.

31
Second
  • When the spelling of a morphograph changes across
    words, it does so in predictable ways.
  • The morphograph trace is spelled differently in
    the words trace and tracing, but the change is
    governed by the rule for dropping the final e.

32
Third
  • The number of morphographs is far fewer than the
    number of words in the written English language
  • and
  • the number of principles for combining
    morphographs is relatively small.

33
Therefore
  • Teaching students to spell morphographs and
    teaching the rules for combining morphographs
    will allow students to spell a far larger set of
    words accurately than by teaching individual
    words through rote memorisation of spelling
    lists.

34
  • There Can be two steps to Spelling through
    Morphographs
  • Step one does not require rules-e.g
  • students might learn to spell the morphographs
    i.e form al ly, combined spell the word
    formally.
  • Step two requires use of previously learnt
    spelling rules
  • e.g hop hopping but, hope hoping

35
  • Using the rules for dropping the final e and the
    rule for Consonant Vowel Consonant consonant
    doubling, students will consistently and
    accurately spell these words and many others that
    conform to the same morphemic rules.

36
  • This morphemic spelling approach continues,
    gradually increasing in difficulty with the
    addition of new spelling rules and new
    morphographs

37
  • In summary, phonemic, whole-word, and morphemic
    approaches are useful for teaching the wide
    variety of word types in the English language.
  • Together these approaches represent a
    comprehensive set of strategies for teaching
    children to be accurate spellers.

38
What programs are available?
  • Spelling Mastery
  • Lessons are sequenced so that students move from
    Phonics to Morphemic spelling in sequence
  • Spelling Through Morphographs
  • Lessons are sequenced so that spelling words are
    efficiently learned and then effectively
    retained.
  • https//www.sraonline.com/products_main.html
  • http//www.spellingzone.com/ (Australian)
  • https//www.sraonline.com/products.html?PHPSESSID
    1243095798a5abd68b17a20cc0d42b6dtid9sid81
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