16
Early Years Writing Block Handwriting, Grammar and Spelling are still taught Part of the teaching focuses on learning about different text types e.g. narrative, procedural, argumentative Focus groups and small teaching groups change Teaching is a point of learning and needs to be continually built on, revised and practised.

Early Years Writing Block

  • Upload
    otis

  • View
    29

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Early Years Writing Block. Handwriting, Grammar and Spelling are still taught Part of the teaching focuses on learning about different text types e.g. narrative, procedural, argumentative Focus groups and small teaching groups change - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Early Years Writing Block

Early Years Writing Block

•Handwriting, Grammar and Spelling are still taughtPart of the teaching focuses on learning about different text types e.g. narrative, procedural, argumentative

•Focus groups and small teaching groups changeTeaching is a point of learning and needs to be continually built on, revised and practised.

Page 2: Early Years Writing Block

Spelling

• What do you do at home to help your children develop an interest in letters, words and spelling ?

• How do you provide assistance when a child asks “How do you spell…?

• The purpose for learning to spell words in the conventional form is to assist others to read our writing

• In spelling, children will experiment and make mistakes as their skills gradually grow

• Each child, being an individual learner, will develop their spelling capabilities at their own pace

Page 3: Early Years Writing Block

Developing the ability to hear and record sounds in words

1. Random placement of letters:

a m m n l p a a h2. Recording dominant sounds:

I w t f p a t s l(I went to the shops and got some lollies.)

I wl cum to git vu cat. (I will come to get the cat.)

Page 4: Early Years Writing Block

Developing the ability to hear and record sounds in words

3. Recording ‘hard to hear’ sounds:

I went home with my bruther.

ESL• These early writing samples were written by children with extensive

knowledge of oral English and English sound/letter patterns. They therefore have a strong basis for working out how English words are written.

• A student learning English as a second language may not initially have this knowledge of English.

• It may take time for them to build up enough of an English oral repertoire to be able to begin to make informed guesses about how words are written in English

Page 5: Early Years Writing Block

Strategies for Solving Words

• What strategies do children use to spell unknown words?

• Spelling TestThink about other strategies used as an adult when attempting to spell ………..

• What did you do to help yourself attempt to spell these words?

• What did you do once you had written the words?

Page 6: Early Years Writing Block

Strategies for Solving Words

vacuum cleaner

dahlia

obstetrician

chrysanthemum

Page 7: Early Years Writing Block

Strategies for Solving Words• All the strategies that you used are valuable and writers must learn to

use them all, not just one strategy!

What is this word?

ghotifish

• ‘gh’ as in enough, ‘o’ as in women and ‘ti’ as in station

Page 8: Early Years Writing Block

Strategies for Solving Words

Fountas&Pinnell (2001) Guided Readers and Writers: Grades 3-6, Heinemann.

1. By Sound Think about the word and sound it out

2. By Look Writing words by thinking about the way they look Visual patterns e.g. oa as in boat, coat, loaf

3. By Meaning Write some words by thinking about what they mean e.g. two, twin, twice, between meaning 2

4. By making connections Use what you know about a word to figure our a new word e.g. Tree, my > try

5. By Inquiry Use reference materials to learn more about words e.g. Lists, dictionaries, charts, ask someone…………….

Page 9: Early Years Writing Block

SpellingSpelling is not a sign of intelligence.Research shows that expert spellers visualise words.Poor spellers do not seem to be able to store and retrieve the visual form of the word.There is no evidence that this skill can be taught for e.g. some people can whistle and some people can not.Expert spellers are born and not taught – those that are not strong spellers rely on the strategies.Always praise every spelling effort from your child and encourage the use of all strategies.

Page 10: Early Years Writing Block

What can you do.• Reading with your child and immersing them in stories provides them with a good foundation to build on.• How the word sounds may help

Say the word slowly so each sound can be articulated Use sound/letter charts Focus on letter identification

• What the words look like may help Recall how the word looks from memory Try writing the word several ways and decide which looks

best Recognise and apply visual patterns, e.g. I know how to spell

main, so I can spell strain, brain

Page 11: Early Years Writing Block

What can you do.•What I know about the word may help

Apply analogies for why the word is spelt that wayBuild on words already known to get unknown words, e.g. I

can spell the compound word birthday because I know how to spell birth and day

I can spell dahlia because I know it was named after a botanist called Dahl

If I can spell jump I can spell jumps, jumped, jumping, jumper

Page 12: Early Years Writing Block
Page 13: Early Years Writing Block
Page 14: Early Years Writing Block
Page 15: Early Years Writing Block
Page 16: Early Years Writing Block