These sounds are quick sounds you can't hold
What are stop sounds?
This blending strategy encourages students to "keep their motor running"
What is continuous blending?
Phoneme is another word for what?
What is a sound?
There is no fluency without...
What is accuracy?
These words have irregular parts.
What are trick words?
Pronounce the sound for the letter W
What is /w/?
This blending strategy could be done on a whiteboard or with the standard sound cards.
What is sound-by-sound blending?
Taking a word and breaking it up into its individual sounds is called.
What is phonemic segmentation?
Use this decodable text reading routine with developing readers.
What is tap reading?
Students do this activity using a straight arm and two pointed fingers.
What is skywriting?
These sounds can be held for as long as you have breath.
What are continuous sounds?
What step after blending helps students move to fluency?
What is automatic word recognition?
How many sounds are there in the word shrimp?
What is 5?
When tap reading, what is the ratio of tapping to whisper reading?
What is 30% tapping, 70% whisper reading?
This kind of instruction is clear and direct.
What is explicit instruction?
Pronounce the sound for the letter Y
What is /y/?
These kinds of words are the hardest for beginning readers to blend.
What are words with stop sounds at the beginning and the end?
Taking individual sounds and making them into a word is an example of.
What is phonemic blending?
Decodable text allows students to sound and feel like what?
What is a fluent reader everyday?
The goal of learning is move information to this place.
What is long term memory?
Don't add this to the end of a stop sound.
What is a schwa?
What are the two scaffolds to get kids from blending to whole word reading?
What are "put it on your lips" and "whisper it into your hand"?
After segmenting a word you don't...
What is blend it back together?
Give an example of affirmative feedback you may give to a student during whisper reading.
What is...
* you read that page with no mistakes
* your reading sounded so smooth
* that sounded exactly like talking
Students need many of these to get new information into long term memory.
What are opportunities to respond?