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Winning the Spelling Bee with Spelling Stories

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Memorizing spelling words with abstract factual rules, taps into left ... Rotten fish words ... rifle, needle, puddle, drizzle, marble, bugle, kettle, cattle ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Winning the Spelling Bee with Spelling Stories


1
Winning the Spelling Bee with Spelling Stories
  • Presenter
  • Elke Schneider (Ph.D.)
  • School of Education
  • Winthrop University, SC
  • E-mail schneidere_at_winthrop.edu

2
Why stories?
  • Language of print sound is a complex and
    abstract system.
  • For 90 of the population those linguistic
    details are being processed predominantly in the
    left hemisphere of the brain. (Baddley, et al.,
    1991)

3
Why stories?
  • Memorizing spelling words with abstract factual
    rules, taps into left side of the brain only.
  • Students who struggle with spelling often have a
    processing weakness in left side of the brain and
    depend on strategies that involve their stronger
    side, the right side of the brain. (Pressley,
    2002)

4
Why stories?
  • Good teaching strives to activate both sides of
    the brain
  • the left, language-based (details, facts)
  • the right side (holistic pictures, gross motor
    learning, creative artistic skills)

5
Why stories?
  • Stories tap into the right side of the brain and
    help memorize, remember and retrieve linguistic,
    traditionally more left-brain oriented facts for
    all learners, especially those who struggle.
    (Baddley, et al., 1991)
  • By 3rd grade every students spelling vocabulary
    is too large and complex to remember all spelling
    words by sight (except maybe for a test from week
    to week!).

6
Why stories?
  • Stories are a multi-cultural heritage.
  • Using stories that produce mental pictures has
    been a successful mnemonic device since the
    Antique Period (Sperber, 1989)
  • Today, educational research documents positive
    long lasting effect of mnemonic devices such as
    the use of stories (e.g., Mastropieri Scruggs).

7
How do you design spelling stories that work?
  • Stories must be short precise.
  • Stories must relate to the students experiences.
  • Personalize critical letters and letter patterns
    into characters that act out certain roles that
    remind the students of characters/experiences in
    real life.
  • Crazy glue stories that glue words that
    otherwise never come together into a story to let
    them do crazy, unrealistic activities.

8
STORIES
  • I. Members of the Alphabet Family
  • Single vulnerable, vivacious vowels
  • Cool cop consonants
  • Silent E, the nurse
  • W Y, the anti-cops
  • Moody C G
  • Unstable final V

9
Silent E, the nurse
  • helps a final V stand up at the end of a word
    have, give, leave, move
  • magic E- POWER to SINGLE VULNERABLE VOWELS when
    they are caught by a COOL COP came, home, fume,
    lime, fine, tone, rake, lake, bike, race, rose,
  • softening pillow, or provides one to make a
    voiceless sharp s be able to take a rest
    between 2 vowels and take a nap saying the
    z-sound rose,
  • nose, phase, cheese,

10
Silent E The Nurse
  • helps letter C say the s-sound C pace, race,
    space, nice, rice, peace, piece,
  • Helps the letter G the soft g-sound G cage,
    rage, stage, age,
  • She helps the letter C and G say these sound when
    they are embedded in longer words
  • C noticeable, without the E the word would not
    sound related to notice
  • embrace ed/ed embraced/ing letter E or I can
    make C say S- sound.

11
Silent E The nurse
  • She is very polite when it comes to leaving her
    place quietly in a word. She only does it,
    however when she knows that another letter that
    stays takes over her nursing job engage ing
    engaging, because letter I can make G soft.
  • engage ment engagement, she stays because no
    other letter can
  • take over the job of keeping G soft
  • NEWER exception judgment

12
Silent E The nurse
  • She makes sure that everyone knows that in very
    important basic words the letter S belongs to the
    root of the word and does NOT signal a plural
  • nurs e nurse (not 1 nur , 2 nurs!) hors e
    horse, purs e purse, wors e worse mous
    e mouse, lous e louse goos e goose
    chees e cheese, pleas e please

13
Egotistical Letter I
  • nosy I- dotted letter peaks over other letters.
  • capitalized when by itself (I am)
  • BUT shrinks to short sound when shut in by
    suffix, even though it should be long
  • col.li.sion, div.i.sion, vi.sion

14
Y W not COPS
  • very friendly consonants
  • refused to become cops.
  • only consonants in the alphabet family that can
    pair up with a single vowel into a fraternal twin
    pair, become a team and make a
  • vowel-ish sound.

15
W Y fraternal twins
  • As a twin team, they are strong. The single
    vowels are not vulnerable anymore and will not
    change their sound, even if a consonant COP comes
    and places itself after a vowel team. These teams
    always appear at the end of a word/syllable.
  • W Y
  • -ew few, crew, knew, new -ey key, obey,
  • -ow cow, throw, bow, glow -oy toy, boy,
    convoy
  • -aw jaw, draw, law, saw -ay day, relay,
  • delay, May, stay
  • -uy buy (red word)

16
SHY Y and his only friend I
  • Y I
  • Y runs away when another letter but I wants
    to attach itself to him
  • cry ing crying
  • Cry ed Y runs I comes cried

17
SHY Y and his only friend I
  • Y in a team does not have to be shy
  • -ey , -ay, -oy
  • destroy ed destroyed
  • Delay ed delayed
  • Pray er prayer
  • Obey ed obeyed

18
Moody soft C G
  • When C is followed by E, I or Y, it goes soft and
    makes the s-sound.
  • ? E, I, Y
  • When G is followed by E, I , or Y, it makes the
    soft G-sound.

19
S taking a nap
  • When voiceless s is framed by voiced vowels,
    they serve as pillows and s takes a nap and
    snoozes off.
  • Plea s e zzzzzz
  • Ro s e zzzzz
  • S zzzzzz

20
Insulted single vowels
  • Single vowels in words with more than 1 syllable
    get insulted when they cannot carry the accent.
  • They cannot say the true long or short sound and
    fall out of the speakers mouth (morning
    sickness sound) SCHWA SOUND

21
The nurse gets a cold
  • AGE-words message, cabbage, village, luggage,
    baggage, cottage
  • -IVE words negative, positive, native
  • She can make G or C soft but cannot jump and give
    the magic E power.
  • She feels too weak to do that.

22
Red word-Jail Words-Rotten fish words
  • Words that cannot be sounded out or spelled
    according to any rule.
  • Hire secret service through multiple
    kinesthetic tracing saying of letter names of
    letters other mnemonic devices

23
1-2-3- Doubling Rule
  • When short words are made longer by adding
    suffixes, check if you need to double a
    consonant
  • 1. Find single (unmarried) vowel in base word
  • 2. It must be blocked by a cop.
  • 3. Your suffix must begin with a vowel (-ing,
    -er, -est)

24
1-2-3- Doubling Rule
  • Then, put a 1 under the vowel in the base word,
    a 2 under the following letter, and 3 in the
    base word must be a consonant.
  • If there is none, DOUBLE 2 letter.
  • If any of the first 3 conditions does not apply,
    JUST ADD.

25
1-2-3 Doubling Rule
  • Examples
  • Clip ing clipping (double 3 empty)
  • Quick er quicker (just add, 3 has Cons.)
  • Thin ly thinly (just add, suffix begins
    with C)
  • Thin er thinner (double 3 empty)
  • Sleep er sleeper (just add, no single V)

26
FLOSS RULE
  • Spelling Rule If you hear F, L, or S at the end
    of a short word with a short vowel ? double F, L,
    S like in FLOSS your teeth.

27
FLOSS RULE
  • Examples
  • -ff cuff, cliff, stiff, stuff, off
  • -ll fill, sill, cell, scull, dull, fell,
  • NEVER all -gthas different sound wall, all
  • -ss grass, moss, miss, fuss, re.gress
  • BUT not thin, gram, log, fat,
  • RED WORDS this, is, chef, pal, of

28
Barf-able syllables
  • The C-le syllable sounds like a barf-sound with
    silent E
  • -ble, -dle, -gle, -zle, -ple, c.kle, -fle,
  • -tle (!)
  • Can have short, long, vowelteam, r-control
    sound-letter patterns
  • in front
  • rifle, needle, puddle, drizzle,
  • marble, bugle, kettle, cattle

29
Chameleon Prefixes
  • Prefixes adapt their last letter to the first
    letter of the root in the word.
  • SODIAC Acronym
  • Spelling Rule If you hear a short vowel in
    prefix 1 consonant after it ? double the
    consonant
  • Spelling Rule If you hear 2 consonants after the
    short vowel, write both

30
Chameleon Prefixes
  • Sub-, suc-, suf-, sur- under
  • Ob-, oc-, against
  • Dis, di-, de- not, apart
  • In-, im-, il-, ic- into or not
  • Ad-, am-, an-,ac, al-, a- add
  • Com, con-, col-,cor-, co- together
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