This video shows 1st graders experiencing «Engagement Text to Decodables,» an instructional practice found in the K - Reading Foundations Skills Block, that engages students in a read - aloud of an engaging complex text before they work
with a decodable text on the same topic.
Beginning readers not only need to secure their decoding skills
with decodable text, but also need read - aloud experiences to build content knowledge, vocabulary, and listening comprehension.
Not exact matches
Whether you're using predictable
text or
decodable text, are the books you are sending children home
with connected to the skills you're teaching in the classroom?
Maureen Pollard — literacy consultant, educator and author of the Little Learners Love Literacy series — sits down
with Teacher for a Q&A on
decodable text.
The phonically
decodable texts are contrived, simple and artificial
with very limited content.
Discover ways to meet the varied needs of the developing reader
with the Superkids Reading Program, which uses a research - based, three - pronged approach to
text use: (1)
decodable text to build decoding automaticity; (2) teacher - supported grade - level informational
text so all students have access to the same vocabulary and content; and (3) above - grade - level read - aloud
text experiences to boost students» listening comprehension and vocabulary.
This brochure explains how Superkids meets the English Language Arts Standards for K — 2,
with an emphasis on
text complexity and
decodable text.
Next students work
with a partner to search for those same high frequency words in the
decodable text.
Use
decodable text that aligns
with the phonetic elements being taught so kids build the habit of decoding words, rather than guessing or relying on pictures.