How many phonemes are in the English language?
Bonus 50 pts: Which letters represent two speech sounds?
What is 44?
Bonus 50 pts: x, q
Are more letters processed to the left or to the right of a fixation if the eye is scanning from left to right?
What is the right?
To identify, read, and spell the differences between words that sound almost alike, the student must first have developed ________ __________ __________?
What is advanced phonemic awareness
In an open word sort, students must construct the categories themselves. True or False?
What is true.
With what symbol do we mark irregular word parts with?
What is a heart?
What are the three levels of phonological awareness?
Bonus 100 pts. What skills fall under each?
What is early, basic, and advanced?
Bonus 100 pts.: early-syllables, alliteration, onset-rime; basic-blending/segmentation; advanced: deletion, substitution, reversal
How many areas of the brain are involved in reading?
Bonus 100 pts: Name them!!
What is four?
Bonus 100 pts: frontal lobe, parietal lobe, occipital lobe, temporal lobe
Meaning emphasis or code emphasis?
Is most strongly supported by research on beginning reading.
What is code emphasis?
Word practice should always emphasize the use of words in sentences and passages.
What is false?
What is the difference between high frequency words and sight words?
What is
sight: instantly recognized w/o much effort
h.f.: most commonly used words in English
Explain the alphabetic principle as depicted in the hourglass figure
What is... the concept that English uses graphemes to represent phonemes.
What is dyslexia? What is dyslexia not?
What is a specific developmental disorder that adversely affects the ability to read and write.
Dyslexia is not "making reversals" or "seeing things backwards"
Meaning emphasis or code emphasis?
Has more student-centered than teacher-led instruction
What is meaning emphasis?
Which word practice activity is this an example of?
gob, cob, cub, cup, cap, cab, gab
What is word chain
Recalling all the letters in a word is more demanding than recognizing the word in print. True or false?
What is true
Explain this image...
What is... sufficient response.
Define each of the following terms: (1) phonology, (2) orthography, (3) morphology, (4) semantics, (5) syntax, (6) discourse, (7) pragmatics
What is....
(1) the rule system by which phonemes can be combined and pronounced to make words
(2) a writing system to represent language
(3) the study of meaningful units and how they are combined in word formation
(4) the study of word and phrase meanings/relationships
(5) the system of rules governing word order in sentences
(6) written or spoken communication
(7) system of rules and conventions for using language in social context
What percent of words in English can be spelled accurately by sound-symbol correspondence rules alone?
What is 50%
What type of activity is useful for helping scholars better understand multiple meaning words by using a visual?
What is word web?
By what grade should the spelling component of a program be separate from the reading component?
What is 2nd Grade?
What is (1) stops, (2) nasals, (3) friatives, (4) affricates, (5) glides, (6) liquids
What is (1) correctly labeled/drawn model, (2) correct roles written for each part of the processor
What is the floss rule?
when the sounds /f/ /l/ /s/ and /z/ follow a short vowel, the consonant is spelled with a double letter
Name 6 word practice activities students can do to practice taught phonics skills?
What is word chains, word lists, word sorts, word building with tiles, word chains and word families
What does LETRS stand for?
Bonus: 250 pts: Name one author of LETRS
What is Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling
Bonus 250 pts: Louisa C. Moats or Carol Tolman