MadTeach

MadTeach got its name because I used to teach in Madison, WI, and that used to make me pretty mad...now I teach in a large city... totally different scene... but I'm keeping the name. :-)

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Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Spelling Strategies That Work

Reprinted without permission... original article found here.


SPELLING STRATEGIES THAT WORK.
From: Instructor (1990) | Date: 5/1/2001 | Author: SNOWBALL, DIANE
Instructor (1990)

Easy lessons to help kids spell well in school and beyond

"I can't figure out what to teach when!" "How will I ever find the time to teach it all?" These are comments I hear all the time about spelling. But teaching it doesn't have to be complicated or time consuming. By focusing on two key aspects that I know help students--how to learn useful words and how to learn strategies related to sounds, spelling patterns, and meaning--I save myself a lot of time and worry. In essence, I concentrate on the habits of competent spellers, which makes the teaching of spelling more manageable, because I'm clear about what I want for my students.

Developing a Sense of Purpose

I strongly believe that students must have authentic reasons for learning how to spell. Here's a quick way to find out if yours do: Ask them, "Why should we want to become better spellers?" If they answer, "So others can read our writing," super. They have an authentic reason. But, if they answer, "To pass the test," it's a good time to think about the bigger issues underlying your program. The following ideas have helped my students develop a sense of purpose.

* Encourage Peer Review--My students do lots of writing in various genres, and they frequently share their work with peers who might ask questions about the whole text or an individual word. For example, when Luca says to Eric, "I'm not sure what you mean here. What's this word meant to be?" it gives Eric a genuine purpose for learning about spelling.

* Offer Clear Feedback--When I review the students' writing with them, I comment on what I notice about their spelling. I also ask them what they think they are doing well and what they should work on to improve their spelling.

* Look for Common Struggles--I examine each student's writing, during and after a writing exercise, to pinpoint their areas of spelling difficulty. For example, when I noticed that many fourth graders in one class didn't know how to use an apostrophe correctly in possessives, I planned a focused study to build their understanding.

* Teach Proofreading--I teach students to proofread their writing by making overheads of their work and then demonstrating how to look carefully at each word for correct spelling: I tell students not to leave proofreading until the end, when it could become an overwhelming chore.

STRATEGY ONE:

Learning Useful Words

Once a sense of purpose is developed, we move on to learning some useful words. I begin with a few words that the entire class is using frequently, but which they are spelling incorrectly.

1) Select Words -- I involve students in the selection of words so that they have a stake in learning how to spell them correctly. In grade three, for example, they may choose common words such as because, specially, and might, and some from social studies, math, and science, such as prairies, multiplication, and photosynthesis.

2) List and Study Words -- I write the words on a chart or overhead and ask the students to:

* Notice if anything is surprising about the spelling of the word, such as, "I can hear a /sh/ sound in specially but the letter is a c."

* Focus on the most useful strategy to remember a word, such as listening for sounds, looking for spelling patterns, using a memory aid, or building from a base word to form the whole word.

* Use the "look, say, spell, cover, write, check" technique many times until the students spell the word correctly and automatically. Many students need to be taught to "look" closely at words, to picture them in their minds and to notice their features.

3) List More Words -- Together, the students and I come up with additional words that extend their knowledge, and I write them on the chart. For example, we may focus on words with the same rime (might: fright, light, sight, plus bite, write, white), with the same spelling pattern (because: cause, fraud, gauze), with the same suffix (multiplication: addition, subtraction, fiction), or with prefixes and/or suffixes added to a base word (especially: specialize, specialization, specializing).

The focus depends on the students' stage of spelling development and to what extent I've demonstrated these ideas. When students are comfortable working with words this way, I ask them to try it independently.

4) Post Wards -- We place the words on a word wall labeled "Words We Use." Students can use these words in future spelling studies, such as the one described below.

STRATEGY TWO: Learning Sounds, Spelling Patterns, and Meaning--A Spelling Study

By observing students' writing and pinpointing their needs, I can custom design spelling studies. Here's one on learning about sounds that I do with first graders, but the same process can be used for studying spelling patterns and meaning as well, with students in all grades.

To ensure that my students understand the principle, and that they can apply it in their writing, I always spend sufficient time on a study. This study, for example, usually takes me about 10 minutes each day for three days. However, a study for learning all of the rules associated with using the ed suffix may last a few weeks.

1) Select the Focus--I select the focus based on what I notice my students doing, for example, learning about the /f/ sound and how it can be represented. I open the study with something like, "I've noticed in your writing that you are trying to make use of the /f/ sound you hear, so let's investigate that sound and see how that helps you."

2) Find Examples--We find examples of words from sources students can read, including the word wall, and we list them on a chart. For example, words with the /f/ sound might include off elephant, for, laugh, from, Sophie, Raffael, family, and rough.

3) Find More Examples--All of the students find more examples on their own, from books, poems, charts, and signs, and add them to the chart. One way to do this is to have students write each word on a blank card for the class to refer to. Usually the hardest part of this study is getting students to stop finding words because they are so interested!

4) Group Words--Using a pocket chart to arrange and group words and letter cards, we work as a class to group the words with the same letter or letters, for example, laugh and rough; elephant and Sophie; off and Raffael; for and family. Students add words, written on cards, to the groups over the next few days.

5) Make Observations--Once we've gathered a sufficient number of words, we begin to form hypotheses such as, "Most words seem to have one f" and "gh is only at the end of words." Then we talk about how this knowledge can help with writing and reading.

6) Apply the Knowledge--I try to demonstrate to students how to use this knowledge during shared writing and shared reading. I also prompt students to do the same during independent writing. For example, if a student writes "foto," I might say, "That's a good try at spelling the word photo. Does it look right? Remember our study about the /f/ sound. What's another way you might try photo?"

Putting It All Together

Using an inquiry process to learn about words will boost your students' spelling by allowing you to focus on their needs, either as a class or individually. And since you won't be trying to cover everything, you'll have more time to devote to what's really important: writing and reading.

Diane Snowball works in schools in North America to help teachers and administrators learn more about teaching children to read and write successfully She is the coauthor, with Faye Bolton, of Spelling K-8: Planning and Teaching (Stenhouse, 1999).

COPYRIGHT 2001 Scholastic, Inc.
This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group.
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Some links re ancient Mexico...

The Mesoamerican Ballgame - A very cool site, well-done, scholarly and full of primary sources, with many interesting details. Younger students would need guidance; in order to explore this site a student would need good reading ability, self-direction, and the skill to organize the information s/he reads. Includes a brief video of players re-enacting the game on an ancient court.

Ballgame - Not nearly as good, and containing style/grammar errors - but includes more details about the rules and scoring than are included in the site above.

That link is part of this site:
Mayan Kids
The site is extensive, although style/grammar errors and possible factual deficiencies limit its usefulness. It has sections for people, places, beliefs, glossary, and games. The people section alone has the following subsections: Foods | Bug tacos | Food bites | Chewing gum | Ball game | Arts | Music | Dance | Beauty | Hairless Dogs | Textiles | Stone Tree | Calendars | Math | Writing | Marriage | Jade | Aztecs | Sailing | Ceramics | Books.


Ancient Mexico... limited and inconsistent. Students should be directed to use specific pages; probably the documents section is most useful, including this:

Letter from Cortés to King Charles V of Spain, 1520 - fascinating. He describes Tenochtitlán in vivid terms; when he compares things in the Aztec city to things in Spain, the Spanish side is usually smaller or lesser. One surprise:

...[T]he principal [idols], in which the people have greatest faith and confidence, I precipitated from their pedestals, and cast them down the steps of the temple, purifying the chapels in which they had stood, as they were all polluted with human blood.... In the place of these I put images of Our Lady and the Saints, which excited not a little feeling in Moctezuma and the inhabitants, who at first remonstrated....

I said everything to them I could to divert them from their idolatries, and draw them to a knowledge of God our Lord. Moctezuma replied, the others assenting to what he said, that they had already informed me they were not the aborigines of the country, but that their ancestors had emigrated to it many years ago; and they fully believed that after so long an absence from their native land, they might have fallen into some errors; that I having more recently arrived must know better than themselves what they ought to believe; and that if I would instruct them in these matters, and make them understand the true faith, they would follow my directions, as being for the best.


This is not helping me get my lesson plans written... more another time.

Sunday night is so damn depressing

It is difficult to continue to work hard every day and feel that I am not succeeding. I still feel that I cannot get on top of things... can't quite get my head above water.

Discipline has continued to be a problem. This last week was the worst. Thursday I ended in tears, in front of the children. Friday I started off stern and firm and it was quiet for an hour or so... made me see what is possible, but also despair because of how much it took for me to achieve it.

Thursday, the assistant principal must have heard the students talking about me crying as they left the building, because she was in my classroom within five minutes. She was very supportive and then sent in the reading coach, who works full time as a liaison between teachers and administration (making sure we understand and fulfill their directives, and that we have the resources we need). The reading coach was also extremely supportive and we came up with several ideas for making things go better.

But when I think of implementing them I just feel exhaustion and despair. Sunday is always like this.

I am awash in my own failures. I work hard all week but never seem to get on top of things. I hand out assignments later than I should (when students have already started doing the work for them) and don't have the modified versions ready for the students with disabilities. I let things go that I should stop (students talking back to me, insulting each other, etc.). I feel helpless amid things that I feel I could and should take control of. But it all seems so huge. Probably there are things in there I can't control. But I'm not sure where that line is.

My failures makes me want to slack off, not care, give up. It is hard to work hard and continue to fail.

But I know the students need me... and I want to be a great teacher - I want to be able to succeed with them, and I know the only way to get there is to persevere through many days, weeks, months (hopefully not years!) of being a mediocre teacher.

Still... it's the hardest thing I have ever done.

I write this in hopes that at the end of the year I will be writing chipper "How I Went From Failure to Success" posts and that someday all these posts will encourage another new teacher. Not sure how I will get over the mountain between me and that future, though.