Supporting our students to acquire
literacy skills can look very different, according to the context, the desired
outcomes and most of all, our learners. Knowing your learners is vital to teaching
and learning. Once we know each learner, we can scaffold their learning and put
in place for most appropriate programmes and teaching strategies that will help
our learners stretch to reach new levels and gain appropriate
necessary skills.
When I work with teachers, I
have noticed how challenging it is for these teachers to identify exactly what
the learner needs to learn when they are well below their chronological peers.
To be a competent reader we need a range of skills, it’s like a big jigsaw
puzzle. For some of our learners, there are pieces of this puzzle missing which
means they are not able to use this knowledge to be competent literacy
learners.
Recently, I have noticed the need to go back to basics. Our learners need explicit teaching of strategies and knowledge. One common area seems to be a need more focus on Phonological awareness such as rhyming, word families and onset rime.
eg : The "onset" is the initial phonological unit of any word (e.g. c in cat) and the term "rime" refers to the string of letters that follow, usually a vowel and final consonants (e.g. at in cat).
- · They help our learners learn about word families, which can lay the foundation for future spelling strategies
- · Teaching our learners to attend to onset and rime will have a positive effect on their literacy skills
- · Learning these components of phonological awareness is strongly predictive of reading and spelling acquisition
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