Monday, September 26, 2011

Florida Centers For reading Research-kindergarten phonics

Florida Center for Reading Research
http://www.fcrr.org/

To begin the year I used the letter arch activities which are just putting the alphabet in order. First with the letters to match then missing letters, the kids enjoyed them. I could see their growth in identifying the letter order and using the letter sound cards from Imagine It on the walls for guides which was good to see they were able to transfer the information from the wall to their work mats.

Recently I’ve introduced the following two Florida Centers into my workstations for rhyming alliteration.

Phonological Rhyme Recognition PA.002


 These are great centers the kids love learning games! The Reading Research Center is a fountain of information and better yet, ready to print, free activities that follow the guidelines for phonological instruction. It is an extraordinary resource for center activities for K-5th grade.  The above game shows that the objectives, activities, materials, and extensions are all presented for you. We print them on color paper just because it's more interesting to the kids. You can use the center as suggested or I like to use it as a rhyme memory game. I introduce the centers during guided reading then the next day I put into independent workstations.

This one is another rhyming activity that is very good.
My only complaint would be that some of the centers that claim to be independent......well............ it depends on your class.

Onset-Rime Blending and Segmentation







Phoneme Awareness and Letter Knowledge Instruction “will facilitate children’s learning of the alphabetic principle by drawing their attention to the sounds that are related to individual letters.”
-Barbara Neslin


Lesson
Objective: to teach onset-rime and letter sound correspondence.
·       During small group instruction give each child a mat and 5 die cut letters.
  • ·       Begin by making sure the red arrow is on the bottom as they look at the mat.
  • ·       Next, check for understanding of the position of the first, middle and last sounds. By having the children touch the appropriate spaces.
  • ·       Vowels are always red and placed in the middle section for instruction on word families and changing the onset rime.
  • ·       “Put the /a/ in the middle and the /t/ at the end. /aaaaaa/ /t/, good at.”
  • ·       Add the /mmmm/ sound to the front. Stretch the sounds /mmm//aaaaa//t/, mat.
  • ·       Take off the /m/ and put on the /p/.
  • ·       /p/ /aaaaa//t/ pat.
  • ·       Take off the /p/ and put on the /sssss/
  • ·       Stretch the sounds. /ssssss//a//t/ sat. 
  • ·       Continue with whatever new letter sounds you are working with that week.
  • Extend activity to ending sounds

I’ve always great results with this in my guided reading groups the children love the hands on activity. They remain engaged and like to be inventive. I let them make up their own words and we discuss whether they have made a real word or nonsense words after they sound them out. I look forward to using them when we get there this year!