It is hard to imagine a daily activity that does not involve a dash of reading. Reading is one of the most important skills one needs to acquire. Many people learn to read at home, school, or both at a young age. Learning to read does not happen from one day to the next, it is a gradual and complex cognitive process. Comprehension, oral language, phonological awareness, phonics, fluency, and vocabulary are the six distinct components work together to create the reading experience.
Comprehension
Comprehension consists of engaging and actively processing a text. To effectively comprehend a text, a student must be able to read fluently, decode words and understand their meanings. In addition, a student must activate prior knowledge to
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To determine whether or not students are developing phonological awareness, teachers and parents can use a checklist. In preschool, students should be able to learn nursery rhymes, count syllables, make sound repetition and syllables. In elementary, students should be able to identify the first sound they hear in words, blend individual sounds into words, and make up rhyming words.
Phonics
Phonics is the relationship between letters and sound in a language. Learning phonics will help children learn to read and spell. According to Phonics Basics (2012), “written language can be compared to a code, so knowing the sounds of letters and letter combinations will help children decode words as he reads. Knowing phonics will also help children know which letters to use as they write words”. Phonics is important because it is one of the foundations that will help build and improve students’ reading skills and efficiency. Phonics reading also helps to increase a child's fluency in reading. Fluency
Vocabulary
Oral and Written Language Oral language develops a foundation for written language. Before writing words or sentences, children must verbally communicate their ideas and thoughts in a cohesive manner. In order to achieve this, they must use their prior language knowledge gleaned from listening and speaking with others. According to Dockrell and Connelly (2015), “A number of studies have explored
There are many important components involved in learning to read, however, five main aspects stand out. These being early experiences with language and print, phonological awareness, phonics, vocabulary and fluency. All of these elements are important and depend on each other to generate the ultimate goal for reading which is comprehension. Teachers need to have a comprehensive understanding of the process of learning to read, intensive knowledge of effective strategies to help children thrive when learning to read
Phonics will start to be taught in nursery or reception and a child will not be able to learn to read without proper understanding of phonics.
To begin, I did the phonological awareness assessments with my three students. Having gotten instruction from Professor Schwarzkopf in class, I felt prepared to conduct this assessment. I appreciated that each form within the phonological awareness section had directions and a practice section where I, as the administrator, could easily explain the directions to each student. The phonological awareness assessments in themselves do not take a long time; however, I noticed as I started to reach the seventh, eighth, and ninth assessment each student started to get bored and frustrated. I really liked how the majority of the assessments were given orally. This helped me to know what they understood phonologically rather than just what a letter
To measure children’s phonological awareness, teachers should look at children’s ability with different skills. For example, a child with strong phonological awareness is able to understand and can use, alliteration, the concept of spoken word, rhyme, syllable blending and syllable segmenting. Children start to read by listening others, and then recognizing sound in words, sounding words out for themselves and recognizing familiar words, so it is important for children to learn the phonological awareness because it can help kids to become a successful reader.
It is important to bear in mind that the phonological component or awareness is fundamental for the development of verbal, semantic and, above all, reader-writer language. When the sound of the letter is not recognized, it can not learn to read or write correctly. Therefore, it is necessary to do a training in phonological awareness
An important learning point entails what is phonological awareness, often many confuse phonological and phonemic awareness. Phonological awareness is akin to metalinguistic skills, it allows a child to examine the sound structure of language. Clients have to discern and discriminate sound structure, such as separating words into syllables, producing rhymes, and identifying words with similar initial sounds. So unlike phonemic awareness, phonological awareness primarily entails spoken
Phonological awareness is when children learn to associate sounds with symbols and create links to word recognition and decoding skills. It consists of skills that develop through the preschool period. Phonological awareness is an important part of learning to read and write, children who have a broad range of phonics are able to identify and make oral rhymes, are able to clap out the syllables in a word and can recognise words with the same initial sounds. Phonological awareness is a good indicator whether your student will have a potential reading difficulty and with the many activities and resources available to us you can develop a child’s awareness early on in a child’s education.
Phonemic awareness is defined as the ability to distinguish sounds; a skill that allows you to listen for, count sounds, and identify distinct sounds. Letter naming isn’t included in phonemic awareness. Phonemic awareness can be taught explicitly or indirectly through games, manipulatives activities, chanting, reading and sing along songs, or poems. Phonemic awareness is more than just recognizing sounds. It also includes the capability to hold on to those sounds, and blend them effectively into words, and take them apart again. Phonemic awareness is important for reading development because it’s the foundation you must overcome in order to get to the next stage of reading, and writing. Research of the NRP (National Reading Panel) says that during the kindergarten year, 18 hours of total of phonemic instruction- just 30 minutes week, six minutes a day- provided maximum advantage.
“For those of us who already know how to read and write, this realization seems very basic, almost transparent” as cited by Adams, Foorman, Lundberg & Beeler (1998). However, research tells us the spoken language is a sequence of little sounds that is not natural to humans. “A strong understanding of phonemic concepts must be solidly in place prior to formal instruction in reading. It is critical that a child make the association that words on the page are simply talk written down” (Tankersley,
Phonological awareness strategies play a vital role in the development of vocabulary and word consciousness. “It is a sound structure of language—that is, that language is made up of words, syllables, rhymes, and sounds (phonemes)” (Phonological Awareness). This awareness of sounds in a spoken language is a strong indicator of future literacy success. Strategies to promote phonological awareness provide opportunities to help students to hear and differentiate and segregate sounds in their oral language. Emergent learns can better discern rhymes and alteration and understand sounds through syllables.
Phonological awareness is the learning of different sounds, words and syllables learnt through listening and speaking (Gillon, 2004). Phonological awareness is important for children in early childhood to learn to establish their reading and writing skills (Hill, 2012, 160). The way children learn phonological awareness is through word play, stretching sounds, repeat ion, rhymes and song (Hill, 2012, p. 134; Roger Scenter, 2013).Phoneme awareness is a smaller area considered as part of phonological awareness, phoneme awareness focuses on individual sounds that effect understanding (Hill, 2012, p. 134). An example of phoneme awareness would be the word cat sound it out as c/, a/ and t/ or the ch sound. Hill (2012, p. 134) states phonological
We learn literacy through phonological practices prompted in reading development to increase fluency and comprehension (Konza, 2006). Phonological awareness concerns itself with manipulation of sound patterns related to speech and intonation and has a relationship to phonemic awareness, being the smaller components of language such as individual letter sounds (Hill, 2012). Rose recommends that synthetic phonics are needed for ‘letter-sound correspondence’, learning how words are blended and broken up for spelling and finally being able to recognize words in print, as well as singularly (2006, p. 18). Understanding of these literacy components culminate to skills required to read (National Reading Panel, 2000). Oral language is casual and elusive in syntactical meaning, so in order for children to become effective readers they need to have exposure to formal and ‘decontextualized’ language properties (Konza, 2006, p. 35). Students will not be able to associate speech to written language
Phonics is described as “understanding letter-sound relationships, as well as larger letter pattern/sound pattern relationships” (Ruddell, 2009). Though in my opinion there is a lot more to phonics than this. There are several aspects to phonics, different types of phonics, negatives to the idea, and several ways to teach it. In this paper I will address all of these based on research I found, the discussion I had with my peers, and my own opinion.
What is Phonics? Phonics is the teaching of the association of sounds with letter identification. With that, there is an extreme amount of emphasis on word decoding skills to help a student sound out unfamiliar words. Phonics is actually a word-recognition strategy that becomes a teaching method only through heavy emphasis. Using phonetic principles, youngsters learn to associate the correct sound with each part of a word and to recognize and pronounce words. (Farr 2004) Phonics systematically teaches a child to break the code of written language. (Ghate 2003) Children are taught to identify letter-sound correspondence with phonics, which helps them put together a word by using sounds.
Reading is believed to be an easy task, something we all learning and develop through the years as we grow, however, is it really that simple? To reading and understanding are both essential when a student begins to read. It is a complex action that requires a multitude of different actions/components, all working at the same time, to become a successful reader. The components that are pertinent to reading are: comprehension, oral language, phonological awareness, phonics, fluency and vocabulary. Without these components, reading may very well be irrelevant because it does not make sense to read and not understand what is being transmitted/relayed. According to the National Reading Panel (NRP), “a combination of techniques is effective for