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Word-Form Recognition Accuracy, Clap It
circle and then I will show you a word on a flashcard. I will keep the word up so you can see it as you play the game. We will all say the word, then clap each letter out loud. Then, after we’ve clapped each letter, we will say the word one more time. After we’ve finished a wo...
Word-Form Recognition Accuracy, Giant Typewriter
Length: 12 minutes Materials: Each letter of the alphabet written/typed large on a piece of 8x11 white paper, one marker to write the words, 26 pieces of white paper for the letters Goal: Given a written regular word, the student can recognize and spell the word with auto...
 English Language Development Standards (CA Dept. of Education)
Reading Word Analysis Grade One: Decoding and Word Recognition 1.10 Generate the sounds from all the letters and letter patterns, including consonant blends and long- and short-vowel patterns (i.e., phonograms), and blend those sounds into recognizable words. 1.11 Read common, irregul...
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Reading Word Analysis Grade One: Decoding and Word Recognition 1.10 Generate the sounds from all the letters and letter patterns, including consonant blends and long- and short-vowel patterns (i.e., phonograms), and blend those sounds into recognizable words. 1.11 Read common, irregular sight words (e.g., the, have, said, come, give, of). 1.12 Use knowledge of vowel digraphs and r-controlled letter- sound associations to read words. 1.13 Read compound words and contractions. 1.14 Read
37 0 http://www.cde.ca.gov/re/pn/fd/documents/englangdev-stnd.pdf#page=37 www.cde.ca.gov/re/pn/fd/documents/englangdev-stnd.pdf#page=37
Reading Word Analysis Grade <span class="highlight">One</span>: Decoding and Word <span class="highlight">Recognition</span> 1.10 Generate the sounds from all the letters and letter patterns, including consonant blends and long- and short-vowel patterns (i.e., phonograms), and blend those sounds into recognizable words. 1.11 Read common, irregular sight words (e.g., the, have, said, come, give, <span class="highlight">of</span>). 1.12 Use knowledge <span class="highlight">of</span> vowel digraphs and r-controlled letter- sound associations to read words. 1.13 Read compound words and contractions. 1.14 Read
Scholastic: Letter Recognition - Confusable Letter Pairs
necessary, model how to click and drag words into the boxes.) Step 4: As they play the game, encourage students to identify what letters the words begin with. Lesson Extensions Make a set of lowercase letter cards for confusable letter pairs, including b, p, d, q, j, i. Write on...
There's Reading . . . And Then There's Reading
highlight the role of social and cultural context in the process of reading. As you read these descriptions, you will probably recognize yourself in more than one camp. This is perfectly reasonable, given that all theories are attempts to characterize the same process. Letter...
www.ncsall.net/index.php?id=460
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2004 136 English Language Arts The Comprehensive Model on the following page illustrates: Teaching Model of Reading · Engagement and Motivation Emergent Literacy (Reason for and Appreciation (Concepts about Print, Letter of Reading) Knowledge, Phonemic Awareness,...
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2004 136 English Language Arts The Comprehensive Model on the following page illustrates: Teaching Model of Reading · Engagement and Motivation Emergent Literacy (Reason for and Appreciation (Concepts about Print, Letter of Reading) Knowledge, Phonemic Awareness, Understanding Alphabetic Principle) Word Recognition Vocabulary and (Phonics and Decoding, Concept Development Sight Word Development, (Dictionary Use, Inferring Meanings Spelling Development, from Context, Proper Usage, Shades of Appreciation of
159 0 http://www.dpi.state.nc.us/docs/curriculum/languagearts/scos/2004/elacurriculumall.pdf#page=159 www.dpi.state.nc.us/docs/curriculum/languagearts/scos/2004/elacurriculuma...
2004 136 English Language Arts The Comprehensive <span class="highlight">Model</span> on the following page illustrates: Teaching <span class="highlight">Model</span> <span class="highlight">of</span> Reading &middot; Engagement and Motivation Emergent Literacy (Reason for and Appreciation (Concepts about Print, Letter <span class="highlight">of</span> Reading) Knowledge, Phonemic Awareness, Understanding Alphabetic Principle) Word <span class="highlight">Recognition</span> Vocabulary and (Phonics and Decoding, Concept Development Sight Word Development, (Dictionary Use, Inferring Meanings Spelling Development, from Context, Proper Usage, Shades <span class="highlight">of</span> Appreciation <span class="highlight">of</span>
 cover.indd
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alphabetic principle, that sounds in words are expressed by the letters of the alphabet. R.WS.00.04 use grapho-phonemic (letter-sound) cues to recognize a few one-syllable words when presented completely out of context. Begin to associate letters and sounds, particularly initial...
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alphabetic principle, that sounds in words are expressed by the letters of the alphabet. R.WS.00.04 use grapho-phonemic (letter-sound) cues to recognize a few one-syllable words when presented completely out of context. Begin to associate letters and sounds, particularly initial and fi nal consonants. Word Recognition Students will… R.WS.00.05 automatically recognize a small number (about 18) of frequently encountered, personally meaningful words in print. R.WS.00.06 make progress in automatically
8 0 http://www.michigan.gov/documents/ELAGLCE_140483_7.pdf#page=8 www.michigan.gov/documents/ELAGLCE_140483_7.pdf#page=8
alphabetic principle, that sounds in words are expressed by the letters <span class="highlight">of</span> the alphabet. R.WS.00.04 use grapho-phonemic (letter-sound) cues to recognize a few <span class="highlight">one</span>-syllable words when presented completely out <span class="highlight">of</span> context. Begin to associate letters and sounds, particularly initial and &#64257; nal consonants. Word <span class="highlight">Recognition</span> Students will&hellip; R.WS.00.05 automatically recognize a small number (about 18) <span class="highlight">of</span> frequently encountered, personally meaningful words in print. R.WS.00.06 make progress in automatically
17 0 http://www.michigan.gov/documents/ELAGLCE_140483_7.pdf#page=17 www.michigan.gov/documents/ELAGLCE_140483_7.pdf#page=17
alphabetic principle, that sounds in words are expressed by the letters <span class="highlight">of</span> the alphabet. R.WS.01.04 use structural cues to recognize <span class="highlight">one</span>-syllable words, blends, and consonant digraphs including: letter-sound, onset and rimes, whole word chunks, word families, digraphs th, ch, sh. Word <span class="highlight">Recognition</span> Students will&hellip; R.WS.01.05 automatically recognize frequently encountered words in and out <span class="highlight">of</span> context with the number <span class="highlight">of</span> words that can be read &#64258;uently increasing steadily across the school year. R.WS.01.06
English Language Arts Performance Standard A Grade 4
reading. Use a variety of strategies and word recognition skills, including rereading, finding context clues, applying their knowledge of letter-sound relationships, and analyzing word structures Infer the meaning of unfamiliar words in the context of a passage by...
dpi.wi.gov/standards/elaa4.html
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 Academic Standards-English/Language Arts Kindergarten
Page 2 Kindergarten English/Language Arts K READING: Word Recognition, Fluency, and Vocabulary Development (continued) K.1.11 Listen to one-syllable words and tell the beginning or ending sounds. Example: Tell what sound you hear at the beginning of the word girl. K.1.12 Listen...
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Page 2 Kindergarten English/Language Arts K READING: Word Recognition, Fluency, and Vocabulary Development (continued) K.1.11 Listen to one-syllable words and tell the beginning or ending sounds. Example: Tell what sound you hear at the beginning of the word girl. K.1.12 Listen to spoken sentences and recognize individual words in the sentence; listen to words and recognize individual sounds in the words. K.1.13 Count the number of syllables in words. * When letters have a slanted line before and after
2 0 http://dc.doe.in.gov/Standards/AcademicStandards/PrintLibrary/docs-english/2006-06-ela-grade0k.pdf#page=2 dc.doe.in.gov/Standards/AcademicStandards/PrintLibrary/docs-english/2006-...
Page 2 Kindergarten English/Language Arts K READING: Word <span class="highlight">Recognition</span>, Fluency, and Vocabulary Development (continued) K.1.11 Listen to <span class="highlight">one</span>-syllable words and tell the beginning or ending sounds. Example: Tell what sound you hear at the beginning <span class="highlight">of</span> the word girl. K.1.12 Listen to spoken sentences and recognize individual words in the sentence; listen to words and recognize individual sounds in the words. K.1.13 Count the number <span class="highlight">of</span> syllables in words. * When letters have a slanted line before and after