strategies for spelling?

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Strategies for spelling? What strategies do you use to spell words? Do these strategies work - sometimes - all the time - never? What do you think you can do to be be a better speller?

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Strategies for spelling?. What strategies do you use to spell words? Do these strategies work - sometimes all the time never? What do you think you can do to be be a better speller?. Best Practice in Spelling. Methodologies which effectively help us to be accurate spellers : - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Strategies for spelling?

Strategies for spelling?• What strategies do you use to spell

words?• Do these strategies work - sometimes- all the time- never?• What do you think you can do to be

be a better speller?

Page 2: Strategies for spelling?

Best Practice in SpellingMethodologies which

effectively help us to be accurate spellers :

Phonemic spelling ‘Whole Word’ approach (Visual)Morphemic spelling

Page 3: Strategies for spelling?

Spelling should be explicitly taught because:

• The English language DOES conform to predictable patterns

• These patterns can be learnt

Collins, 1983Dixon, 1991Graham, 1999Dixon and Engelmann, 2002

Page 4: Strategies for spelling?

1. Phonemic Spelling• Understanding the

relationship between letters and their corresponding sounds is an important skill for successful reading and spelling performance.

Page 5: Strategies for spelling?

• We have less difficulty spelling words that are based on predictable letter-sound relationships.

• About 87% of our language has predictable letter-sound patterns

Page 6: Strategies for spelling?

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.

Page 7: Strategies for spelling?

The Dyslexic SpellerDisadvantage• The area of the brain that is used to

connect the sounds to letters is normally a weak area in people with dyslexia.

Page 8: Strategies for spelling?

The Dyslexic SpellerAdvantageThe brain can be rewired to work with

these sounds (even in adults).

Page 9: Strategies for spelling?

Rewiring is achieved with - • Systematic phonics instruction

boosts the spelling skills(National Reading Panel, UK, 2000)• practice (research shows to form a

neural pathway a word, sound, pattern must be reviewed over 20 times)

Page 10: Strategies for spelling?

2. Whole Word Approach

Not all words in the English language can be spelled correctly using letter-sound correspondence.

About 13% of words do not follow the letter- sound patterns

Page 11: Strategies for spelling?

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 learn irregularly spelled words, different strategies are required.

Page 12: Strategies for spelling?

Advantages:

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

Page 13: Strategies for spelling?

Disadvantages:• Memorisation is not the most

efficient strategy for spelling instruction.

Page 14: Strategies for spelling?

• In a typical ‘Whole Word’ program, groupings of words are based on some similarity –Similar sound patterns sounds like th- or –and words–Word lists for a particular topic eg

work related words, course words.

Page 15: Strategies for spelling?

Strategy for learning whole word spelling - the Look-say-cover-write 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.

Page 16: Strategies for spelling?

• 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.

Page 17: Strategies for spelling?

3. Morphemic Approach• A morphograph is the smallest

unit of identifiable meaning in written English.

• Morphographs include prefixes, suffixes, and bases or roots.

Page 18: Strategies for spelling?

• Recognising different morphographs can help to 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.

Page 19: Strategies for spelling?

• Learn the basic rules applied when adding a suffix to the end of a word.

• Eg try – tried• stop – stopped• wave - waved

Page 20: Strategies for spelling?

Advantages.

Page 21: Strategies for spelling?

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.

Page 22: Strategies for spelling?

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.

Page 23: Strategies for spelling?

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.

Page 24: Strategies for spelling?

Therefore: Learning to spell morphographs

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

Page 25: Strategies for spelling?

• 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 learning how to be an accurate speller.

Page 26: Strategies for spelling?

Whole wordsCommon words,Difficult words,

homonyms

MorphemesPrefixes, suffixes

Root wordsSpelling rules

Auditory -phonicssyllablessounds