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Chapter 4: Letter Knowledge Brittany McHargue

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  • Chapter 4: Letter KnowledgeBrittany McHargue

  • What? Letter Names Letter Shapes Letter Sounds Letter Formation (handwriting)Children often begin by learning the name of the first letter of their own first name. Treiman et al.,. 2006

  • What?Letter Name Iconicity - the names of the letters contain the sound that the letter representsFor ex: the name of the letter b contains /b/Pronounced /b/ //- In English, there are only 2 totally noniconic letter names (h & w) Pronounced // /ch/ & /d/ // /b/ // /l/ /yoo/Quiz: 1: What English consonant letter names begin with the sound that the letter frequently stands for?2: Which English consonant letter names end with the sound that the letter frequently stands for?

    1: b,d,j,k,p,t,v,z 2: f,l,m,n,r,s,x

  • What?Letter ShapesVisually Similar (the more alike the appearance of 2 letters is the more likely students will confuse them)For ex:- Letter Shape (identical when rotated, flipped, reversed) b d p q- Letter Case (identical pairs) Cc, Oo, Ss, XxA lowercase letter that is a smaller version of the uppercase letter is easier to recognize than one that is different

  • What?Letter SoundsPhonologically Similar (the number of phonemes that pairs of letter names share in the same position)For ex: the letter name p shares a phoneme // with the letter b but does not share any phonemes with the letter name fLetters that are both Phonologically & Visually Similar are especially likely to confuse studentsFor ex: (b d)

  • What?Use of Letter Names to Learn Letter Sounds Children appear to use letter names to help learn and remember letter sounds.. Treiman et al., 2006 - Studies have shown that students are better at identifying a letters sound when it was at the beginning of the letter name than at the end or not at all (like h & w)For ex: when spelling /win/ some Kindergartners spelled it with the letter y because they said the letter y makes the sound /w/

  • What?Letter Handwriting- Introduces primary-grade students to the letter forms found in printed text- Is linked to the basic reading and spelling achievementTechnological advances do not eliminate the need for explicit teaching of handwriting. Spear-Swerling, 2006

  • Why?Letter knowledge has a foundational role in literacy- Learning letters fosters phonological awareness- Knowing the names of letters helps the mastery of sound/spelling correspondences for decoding.- Fluent letter naming leads to word-reading accuracy- Handwriting practice aids letter recognition development- Fluent handwriting leads to better composition skills.A childs ability to identify the letters of the alphabet by name is one of the best predictors of how readily he or she will learn to read. Treiman, Kessler & Pollo, 2006

  • When?To Teach:Through Informal Experience - Alphabet songs - Alphabet books - Manipulating alphabet lettersWhen Children start school - They need formal instruction that will help them name, recognize, & write the letters - Theres no consensus on the best sequence for teaching letters as some letters may take more time than others

  • When?To Assess:Letter Naming Fluency- Kindergarten: Fall, Winter, Spring & 1st grade: Fall Students are assessed on the speed and accuracy of their letter knowledge to show how thoroughly they were learned by identifying letters in & out of sequence with automaticityHandwriting Skills- Observation of execution, legibility, & speed of writing Execution (pencil hold, posture, letter formation) Legibility (readability of letters & spacing within & between words) Speed (ability to complete tasks efficiently)

  • How?Uppercase (Teach 1st in Kindergarten because its more distinguishable)Letter Recognition (Names & Shapes)- Sing Alphabet Song to different tunesFor ex: Mary Had a Little lamb- Teach/Model- Activities for Cumulative ReviewFor ex: Alphabet Center

  • How?Uppercase (continued)HandwritingStudents should learn a highly consistent way to form a letter every time they write it. Spear-Swerling, 2006-- Continuous stroke-- Teach/Model Posture Paper Position Pencil Grip- Guided Practice Trace with finger/pencil Copy with finger/pencil

  • Lowercase (Teach 1st for 1st grade as its more predominant in reading text)Letter Recognition (Names & Shapes)- Read an Alphabet Big Book- Letter matchingFor ex: Alphabet Concentration Handwriting- Review habits- Teach/Model- Guided PracticeHow?

  • Letter-Sound Strategy - Letter names & sounds can be taught togetherReview Letter Naming Automaticity Initial Sound in Letter Names- Teach/Model- Guided Practice Final Sound in Letter Names- Teach/Model- Guided Practice

    How?

  • Conclusion!Letters are the components for written words. They represent sounds systematically in the spelling of words. Learning letters requires becoming familiar with 26 uppercase and 26 lowercase shapes and associating these letter shapes to their letter names. Handwriting practice helps young students learn and recall letter shapes. Ehri and Roberts 2006; Beringer 1999

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