1 / 9

Strategy Share

Strategy Share. Jesica Cruz SPED 503. Syllabication Strategy. Syllabicate (“sound-it-out”) Used for decoding to increase fluency A great warm-up activity prior to reading an expository passage Time: 15 minutes.

wylie
Download Presentation

Strategy Share

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Strategy Share Jesica Cruz SPED 503

  2. Syllabication Strategy • Syllabicate (“sound-it-out”) • Used for decoding to increase fluency • A great warm-up activity prior to reading an expository passage • Time: 15 minutes

  3. Objective:For the students to correctly pronounce the words by applying the syllabication strategy. • Materials: • Horizontal handout of words spread out (three to four rows of four words) • Document camera/Projector • Or whiteboard

  4. Prior to implementing this strategy: Review Phonics rules • Open syllables • Closed syllables • Long vowel sounds (ū) • Short vowel sounds (ŭ) • Schwa () • Silent-e

  5. Step 1: Select 10-16 words from the Expository passage • molecules • carbon • organisms • sulfur • atoms • bonded • abundant • functional • unique • properties • components • attached

  6. Step 2: Create the handout • Type up the words horizontally on a word document • Spread them out and increase the font • It should take up the entire page

  7. Step 3: Make an answer key • Use a dictionary to determine the correct syllables and sound pronunciation • www.dictionary.com • For example: • Molecule  mol’-kūl  mol-uh-kyool • mol/e/cule

  8. Lets syllabicate! • Set a timer or specify how much time the students have to put slashes in between the syllables • Have students complete one row at a time or whole page • Student(s) respond with, “In between the ____ and ____…” • You can have one student at time tell you where to put the slashes or call on a group of students sitting at the same table • The student(s) tell you to put the slash in between which two letters • Give feedback • Have another student agree or disagree with the slash and explain their strategy • Cue the student(s) by saying, “short /o/…long /u/…schwa…closed syllable” etc. • If students miss a syllable, model the strategy again by clapping or tapping out the word • Reading the word • You say, “first syllable…second syllable… blend” • While you are saying this, you point or draw a half-circle under the syllable.

  9. Where I learned this? • SYNERGY Academies • Randy Palisoc- Co-Founder/Chief Achievement Officer • References • Open Court Reading • Power Over Words • http://www.education.com/reference/article/syllabication-rules/

More Related