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All About Teaching Reading & Writing
Taxonomy
The Simple View of Reading

Word Recognition x Language Comprehension = Reading Comprehension

Assessment

The process of measuring students' progress and providing information to help guide instruction

Word Recognition

The ability to see a word and know how to pronounce it without consciously thinking about it

Phonological Awareness

A group of skills that enable you to recognize and manipulate parts of spoken words

Articulation

Syllables

Onset-Rime

Phonemic Awareness

Phonics

A method for teaching children the relationship between spoken sounds and written letters so they can learn to decode and encode

Sound-Letter Correspondence

Phonics Patterns

Common letter combinations found in words.

Short Vowels Skill Explainer
Closed Syllables Skill Explainer
Glued Sounds Skill Explainer
Open Syllables Skill Explainer
Spelling with 'c' vs. 'k' Skill Explainer
Consonant Digraphs Skill Explainer
Blends Skill Explainer
‘-ck’ Spelling Rule Skill Explainer
FLoSS(Z) Spelling Rule Skill Explainer
‘y’ as a Vowel Skill Explainer

Coming soon.

    Magic 'e' Skill Explainer
    Soft 'c' and Soft 'g' Skill Explainer

    Coming soon.

      R-Controlled Vowels Skill Explainer

      Coming soon.

        Vowel Teams and Dipthongs Skill Explainer

        Coming soon.

          '-tch' Spelling Rule Skill Explainer
          '-dge' Spelling Rule Skill Explainer

          Coming soon.

            Consonant '-le' Skill Explainer

            Coming soon.

              Schwa Skill Explainer

              Coming soon.

                Irregularly Spelled High-Frequency Words

                High-frequency words that have a part of their spelling that has to be memorized

                Irregularly Spelled High-Frequency Words

                Multisyllable Words

                Words that have more than one word part

                Prefixes

                How to add meaningful beginnings to words

                Suffixes

                How to add meaningful endings to words

                Language Comprehension

                The ability to understand the meaning of spoken words

                Reading Comprehension

                The ability to understand the meaning of printed text

                Text Considerations

                Characteristics of a text that impact the ease or difficulty of comprehension.

                Strategies and Activities

                How a reader approaches a specific text, depending on their purpose for reading

                Reader’s Skill and Knowledge

                The skills and knowledge a reader brings to the reading task that are necessary for comprehension

                Sociocultural Context

                Elements in a classroom that affect how well a child learns to read

                Fluency

                The ability to read accurately with automaticity and expression

                Fluency: Accuracy, then Automaticity

                Reading or decoding words correctly (accuracy) and reading at an appropriate rate (automaticity)

                Accuracy, then Automaticity Skill Explainer

                Coming soon.

                  Fluency: Expressive Text Reading

                  Reading characterized by accuracy with automaticity and expression

                  Expressive Text Reading Skill Explainer

                  Coming soon.

                    (active)
                    Writing

                    The act of putting thoughts into print using transcription and composition skills

                    Features of Structured Literacy

                    A systematic and explicit approach to teaching reading based on research

                    • Handwriting, Spelling, and Typing

                    Is handwriting actually important for writing?

                    Joan Sedita, founder of Keys to Literacy, talks about how research shows that young students improve their writing and alphabet knowledge when they handwrite letters and words while simultaneously learning letter-sound correspondence.

                    Video thumbnail for Is Handwriting Actually Important for Writing?
                    Produced by Reading Universe, a partnership of WETA, Barksdale Reading Institute, and First Book
                    Hide Video Transcript Show Video Transcript

                    Let's talk about handwriting and/or keyboarding. If you want to get something out on paper, you have to be able to write it. You also have to be able to spell it. But even if you know how to spell the word, you have to be able to get those letters down on the paper. And if students of any age have to put too much energy into thinking about how to form those letters, it's going to take energy away from the critical thinking parts of being able to write. Now, there's a lot of research out there that shows that students, by the time they're in fourth grade, if they're not fluent with that handwriting and spending too much energy, it really affects the quality of their writing, of their composing.

                    Now, there's uncertainty ... there's no set answer to the question about should it be cursive, should it be manuscript, but we do know that whichever it is, students have to become fluent in that. Now, let's also make the connection to keyboarding or typing. Very young children don't have ... they're not developmentally able to do the kind of keyboarding that adults and older students can, but they can hunt and peck. Once students hit about fifth or sixth grade, they're developmentally more able to do the keyboarding. And there's great debate over whether we should spend time with handwriting or go right to keyboarding. I'm not here to answer that question. I do believe that for elementary children, in particular, there's also so much research that shows that if students are learning to hand write the letters at the same time that they're learning the letter-sound correspondences, that improves the letter writing, and it also improves the alphabetic knowledge that they're developing during a phonics lesson. So, for lots of reasons, the ability to be fluent in that transcription skill of handwriting and/or keyboarding is absolutely essential.

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                    Reading Universe is made possible by generous support from Jim & Donna Barksdale; the Hastings/Quillin Fund, an advised fund of the Silicon Valley Community Foundation (opens in new window); the AFT (opens in new window); the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation (opens in new window); and three anonymous donors.