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Shine in-depth training 
Dr Jacqui Dornbrack
Focus on four aspects 
1. The complexity of the reading process 
2. Teaching phonics 
3. Teaching reading 
4. Teaching writing
Reading and the brain 
• We were not born to read(no genetic disposition) 
• Recently acquired cultural invention that requires 
something new from existing structures in the 
brain 
• Reading can only take place because of the 
brain’s ‘plastic’ design 
• When reading takes place the brain is changed 
forever both physiologically and intellectually 
• Eg a person who learns to read in Chinese uses a 
different set of pathways to when they read in 
English. Hence we are what we read
When do we learn to read/ 
• Process begins as soon as an infant is read to 
• ‘how often this happens, or fails to happen, in 
the first five years of childhood turns out to be 
one of the best predictors of later reading’ 
(Wolf, 2007:20). 
• By kindergarten a gap of 32 million words 
already separates some children in 
linguistically impoverished homes from their 
more stimulated peers (Wolf, 2007:20)
• Reading for pleasure not modelled (usually 
associated with school & work) 
• Children with a rich repertoire of words and 
their associations will experience a 
text/conversation very differently from 
children who not not have the same stored 
words and concepts 
• We bring our entire store of meanings to 
whatever we read
• isiXhosa and Afrikaans are phonetic languages 
(direct link between sounds and letters) 
• English is a phonemic language (complex link 
between letters and sounds; many exceptions 
and many distinctions between vowel sounds 
(21 English vowel sounds!!!) 
• This makes learning it very difficult
Learning to read a language you don’t 
know 
• Ear-training (auditory memory) 
• Discriminate between sounds 
• Remember the acoustic qualities of sounds 
• Compare sounds with memory images 
• Form speech sounds (‘gymnastics of the vocal 
organs’)
3 cueing strategies for reading 
1. Grapho-phonic (grapheme and phonemes) 
2. Syntactic (knowledge of language structures) 
3. Semantic (Knowledge of the word and the 
world) 
Meaning is in the person not the word!!!
Phonics 
• Have to learn to recognise various speech-sounds 
• Learn to make sounds with own organs of 
articulation 
• Learn to use these sounds in their proper 
places 
• Learn the sound-attributes (length, pitch, 
stress) 
• Learn to join the sounds
Grade 3 Phonics (CAPS) 
• Uses words that are pronounced and spelt the 
same but have different meanings 
(homophones) eg trap, 
• Uses words that sound the same but are spelt 
differently (hear, here; bare, bear…. 
• Builds 3, 4 and 5-letter words 
• Sorts letters and words into alphabetical order 
• Spells words correctly using their phonic 
knowledge
Presentaion for 17 october
Showing the ‘I’ sound
Segmenting sounds
Visual reference for vowels
Need for automaticity 
• Working memory (cognitive blackboard) has to 
work even harder when you are unfamiliar with 
structures, words, sounds and concepts 
• Can lessen the load by: Improving speed (sight 
words & eye movement (and finger movement!!) 
• and scaffolding text more through visuals and 
prediction
Paired/Independent Reading 
• Reads own and others writing 
• Reads aloud to a partner 
• Reads independently simple fiction 
• and non-fiction books and books from 
different cultures, books read in Shared 
Reading sessions, magazines and 
comics
Grade 3 reading 
• Reads enlarged texts such as fiction and non-fiction big 
books, newspaper articles, plays, dialogues and 
electronic texts (computer texts) 
• Reads book and discusses the main idea, the 
characters, the ‘problem’ in the story, the plot and the 
values in the text 
• Answers a range of higher order questions based on 
the passage read
Grade 3 reading continued 
• Reads different poems on a topic 
• Uses visual cues to talk about a graphical text, e.g. 
advertisements, pictures, graphs, charts and maps 
• Finds and uses sources of information, e.g. community 
members, library books 
• Uses table of contents, index and page numbers to find 
information 
• Uses key words and headings to find information in non-fiction 
texts 
• Uses a dictionary to find new vocabulary and their 
meanings
Reading for meaning 
• Meanings of words, sentences, visuals, 
• Importance of prediction 
• Inferred meanings 
• Use task words such as: identify, point out, 
describe, show, locate, list, contrast, 
summarise, classify…. 
• Draw attention to language structure and 
punctuation
Grade 2 writing 
• Participates in a discussion and contributes ideas 
• Experiments with words: writes a simple poem or 
song 
• Writes at least two paragraphs (ten sentences) on 
personal experiences or events such as a family 
celebration 
• Drafts, writes and publishes own story of at least two 
paragraphs, using language such as ‘once upon a time’ 
and ‘in the end’
Grade 2 writing continued 
• Organizes information in a chart or table 
• Uses informational structures when writing (eg recipes) 
• Sequences text by using words like ‘first’, ‘next’ and ‘finally’ 
• Uses correct punctuation (full stops, commas, question 
marks and exclamation marks) so that others can read what 
has been written 
• Spells common words correctly and attempts to spell 
unfamiliar words using phonic knowledge 
• Uses present, past and future tenses correctly
Grade 3 Writing 
Writes a selection of short texts for different purposes, e.g. 
writes recounts, dialogues 
• Writes about personal experiences in different forms, e.g. 
writes a short newspaper article 
• Drafts, writes, edits and ‘publishes’ own story of at least 
two paragraphs (at least 12 sentences) for others to read 
• Writes and illustrates six to eight sentences on a topic to 
contribute to a book for the class library 
• Uses informational structures when writing, e.g. 
experiments, recipes 
• Keeps a diary for one week
• Writes a simple book review 
• Sequences information and puts it under headings 
• Summarises and records information, e.g. using mind maps 
• Uses punctuation correctly, e.g. capital letters, full stops, 
commas, question marks, exclamation marks, inverted 
commas, apostrophes in contractions) 
• Uses conjunctions to form compound sentences 
• Uses phonics knowledge and spelling rules to write more 
difficult words 
• Uses a dictionary
Writing assessment Grade 3 term 2 
• Writes a simple book review 
• Writes at least two paragraphs (ten or more sentences) on 
personal experiences such as daily news or a school event 
• Uses correct grammar so that others can read and 
understand what has been written 
• Uses phonics knowledge and spelling rules to write unfamiliar 
words 
• Uses punctuation correctly; capital letters, full stops, commas, 
question marks, exclamation marks and inverted commas
Writing you can do at Shine 
• Write lists 
• Write about family, food, pets, transport 
• Write descriptions (house, friend, mom,…) 
• Write a card (thank you, birthday….) 
• Write a headline 
• Write short poem 
• Dictate and create sentences

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Presentaion for 17 october

  • 1. Shine in-depth training Dr Jacqui Dornbrack
  • 2. Focus on four aspects 1. The complexity of the reading process 2. Teaching phonics 3. Teaching reading 4. Teaching writing
  • 3. Reading and the brain • We were not born to read(no genetic disposition) • Recently acquired cultural invention that requires something new from existing structures in the brain • Reading can only take place because of the brain’s ‘plastic’ design • When reading takes place the brain is changed forever both physiologically and intellectually • Eg a person who learns to read in Chinese uses a different set of pathways to when they read in English. Hence we are what we read
  • 4. When do we learn to read/ • Process begins as soon as an infant is read to • ‘how often this happens, or fails to happen, in the first five years of childhood turns out to be one of the best predictors of later reading’ (Wolf, 2007:20). • By kindergarten a gap of 32 million words already separates some children in linguistically impoverished homes from their more stimulated peers (Wolf, 2007:20)
  • 5. • Reading for pleasure not modelled (usually associated with school & work) • Children with a rich repertoire of words and their associations will experience a text/conversation very differently from children who not not have the same stored words and concepts • We bring our entire store of meanings to whatever we read
  • 6. • isiXhosa and Afrikaans are phonetic languages (direct link between sounds and letters) • English is a phonemic language (complex link between letters and sounds; many exceptions and many distinctions between vowel sounds (21 English vowel sounds!!!) • This makes learning it very difficult
  • 7. Learning to read a language you don’t know • Ear-training (auditory memory) • Discriminate between sounds • Remember the acoustic qualities of sounds • Compare sounds with memory images • Form speech sounds (‘gymnastics of the vocal organs’)
  • 8. 3 cueing strategies for reading 1. Grapho-phonic (grapheme and phonemes) 2. Syntactic (knowledge of language structures) 3. Semantic (Knowledge of the word and the world) Meaning is in the person not the word!!!
  • 9. Phonics • Have to learn to recognise various speech-sounds • Learn to make sounds with own organs of articulation • Learn to use these sounds in their proper places • Learn the sound-attributes (length, pitch, stress) • Learn to join the sounds
  • 10. Grade 3 Phonics (CAPS) • Uses words that are pronounced and spelt the same but have different meanings (homophones) eg trap, • Uses words that sound the same but are spelt differently (hear, here; bare, bear…. • Builds 3, 4 and 5-letter words • Sorts letters and words into alphabetical order • Spells words correctly using their phonic knowledge
  • 15. Need for automaticity • Working memory (cognitive blackboard) has to work even harder when you are unfamiliar with structures, words, sounds and concepts • Can lessen the load by: Improving speed (sight words & eye movement (and finger movement!!) • and scaffolding text more through visuals and prediction
  • 16. Paired/Independent Reading • Reads own and others writing • Reads aloud to a partner • Reads independently simple fiction • and non-fiction books and books from different cultures, books read in Shared Reading sessions, magazines and comics
  • 17. Grade 3 reading • Reads enlarged texts such as fiction and non-fiction big books, newspaper articles, plays, dialogues and electronic texts (computer texts) • Reads book and discusses the main idea, the characters, the ‘problem’ in the story, the plot and the values in the text • Answers a range of higher order questions based on the passage read
  • 18. Grade 3 reading continued • Reads different poems on a topic • Uses visual cues to talk about a graphical text, e.g. advertisements, pictures, graphs, charts and maps • Finds and uses sources of information, e.g. community members, library books • Uses table of contents, index and page numbers to find information • Uses key words and headings to find information in non-fiction texts • Uses a dictionary to find new vocabulary and their meanings
  • 19. Reading for meaning • Meanings of words, sentences, visuals, • Importance of prediction • Inferred meanings • Use task words such as: identify, point out, describe, show, locate, list, contrast, summarise, classify…. • Draw attention to language structure and punctuation
  • 20. Grade 2 writing • Participates in a discussion and contributes ideas • Experiments with words: writes a simple poem or song • Writes at least two paragraphs (ten sentences) on personal experiences or events such as a family celebration • Drafts, writes and publishes own story of at least two paragraphs, using language such as ‘once upon a time’ and ‘in the end’
  • 21. Grade 2 writing continued • Organizes information in a chart or table • Uses informational structures when writing (eg recipes) • Sequences text by using words like ‘first’, ‘next’ and ‘finally’ • Uses correct punctuation (full stops, commas, question marks and exclamation marks) so that others can read what has been written • Spells common words correctly and attempts to spell unfamiliar words using phonic knowledge • Uses present, past and future tenses correctly
  • 22. Grade 3 Writing Writes a selection of short texts for different purposes, e.g. writes recounts, dialogues • Writes about personal experiences in different forms, e.g. writes a short newspaper article • Drafts, writes, edits and ‘publishes’ own story of at least two paragraphs (at least 12 sentences) for others to read • Writes and illustrates six to eight sentences on a topic to contribute to a book for the class library • Uses informational structures when writing, e.g. experiments, recipes • Keeps a diary for one week
  • 23. • Writes a simple book review • Sequences information and puts it under headings • Summarises and records information, e.g. using mind maps • Uses punctuation correctly, e.g. capital letters, full stops, commas, question marks, exclamation marks, inverted commas, apostrophes in contractions) • Uses conjunctions to form compound sentences • Uses phonics knowledge and spelling rules to write more difficult words • Uses a dictionary
  • 24. Writing assessment Grade 3 term 2 • Writes a simple book review • Writes at least two paragraphs (ten or more sentences) on personal experiences such as daily news or a school event • Uses correct grammar so that others can read and understand what has been written • Uses phonics knowledge and spelling rules to write unfamiliar words • Uses punctuation correctly; capital letters, full stops, commas, question marks, exclamation marks and inverted commas
  • 25. Writing you can do at Shine • Write lists • Write about family, food, pets, transport • Write descriptions (house, friend, mom,…) • Write a card (thank you, birthday….) • Write a headline • Write short poem • Dictate and create sentences