Sight Word Practice

There are many ways to practice sight words, but I just found this awesome website where you can put in your own sight words and it makes a “Snakes & Ladder” board game to play! How neat? 

Level 1 Trick Words Unit 1-9

Check it out and have fun!! 

Mrs. K 

 

Leveled Literacy Intervention at a Glance


Hello! 

I figured I would write a little bit about the program I use with my students, so if you’re a parent you’re able to see what your student does with me throughout the week and if you’re an educator you are able to see how I implement the program.

The LLI kits support below grade level students who struggle in reading and writing. They are not for whole class lessons, but rather small intimate group settings, no more than 4-6 students in a group.  There are different colored kits (orange, green, blue, red & gold).  I have the green and blue kits which are for levels 1-3.

Leveled Literacy Intervention is a scientifically-based program that works with struggling readers so they are able to reach the level they need to be on.  The program is fast paced and provides students with comprehension, fluency, writing, phonics, & vocabulary throughout each lesson.  The majority of the program focuses on fluency and writing.

As mentioned above, I work with the green kit (1st grade) and blue kit (2nd-3rd grade).  There are 110-120 or so lessons in each kit.  Each lesson has 4 colored copies of the book and 6 black & white copies (take home books) or each book.

The program supplies canvas bags with a spot that fits an average sized index card in it perfectly which I place their name on to take their black and white copies of the book home to read and return.

The teachers manual walks you through each lesson verbatim, but on TpT I purchased the lessons printed out on single pages that I placed in a binder which has made it a lot easier with planning.  There is also a Prompting Guide and resource book: When Readers Struggle: Teaching That Works which are available in the kit.   The Prompting Guide is a great tool to use because it targets reading behaviors and gives you word-for-word what you are able to say to guide your student.

Each lesson takes about 30 minutes to teach.  The kits come with a large variety of high-interest texts: fiction, non-fiction, classic tales and series books (Meli, The Fun Club, etc.).  Each level has 10 lessons that are numbered.  The even lessons introduce the New Book (on their level) and the odd lesson is book on their independent level to build fluency.Slide2Slide1

I set my week up in 3 days.  I see my students 3 times a week/30 minutes a session.

I needed to figure out a way to touch upon each part of the program that works best for me and my students.

On my board (so the students can see the schedule as well and get used to the routine) I have a 3 day schedule:

Day 1: Reading Schedule

Re-read quietly – 5 minutes

Goals – 1 minute

Phonics/Word Work- 5 minutes

New Book – 15 minutes

Letter/Word Work – 5-10 minutes

Exit Ticket

Day 2: Testing Day Schedule 

(While I am calling 1-2 students over to do a reading record)

  1. Re-read quietly
  2. Unfinished sentences in Writing Book
  3. Word Bags (the word cards – quiz a friend, play memory)
  4. Worksheet on Table (one of the fold sheets if unable to get to the day before)

Then I continue with our independent reading book for that day following the teacher’s manual.

Day 3: Writing Day

In their writing book (LLI comes with red, yellow and purple writing books with blank pages in it – the colors mean nothing other than allowing the children to have a choice and the blank pages which are for beginner writers to use.  It allows them to not get distracted and concentrate so much on filling up the lines, but rather to be concious of placing the print on the page rather than just filling up the lines.  When finished the story or sentences they wrote can be easily read without the distraction of any lines on the paper).

LLI Schedule

Let’s get into the different pieces of the lesson now….

Phonics/Word Work: 

This is a quick piece before starting the book for the day.   Students are explicitly and systematically taught during this part.   The kits provide, Alphabet &b Consonant Cluster Charts (we just do all of our work in our writing book not to waste more paper), poems,  letter and word games, and lists of suggested words (what I send home in their ‘word baggies’).  I like to try and incorporate magnetic letters with cookie trays, children going up to the board to write, highlighting in our poem book, and using colored pens in our writing book.  There are many great apps that work on phonics as well (see my previous post).

New Book: 

This is when the instructional leveled book gets introduced to them.  I always discuss the cover photo, genre, title and then do a picture walk stopping at words I think may be difficult for them while discussing the spelling rule for that word and definition.  I then give a book to each child and have them use my whisper phones that I made.  NO ROUND ROBIN READING (where you go around and each child reads a page in the book)  it DOES NOT build on fluency and because of the constant picking of names and changing rate of reading the comprehension is then lost.  I LOVE whisper reading.  I start my group off at different points, so they aren’t hearing each other read at the same point, and they use the whisper phones that magnify their voice into their own ear.  I am then able to hear each of them, stop them to ask questions individually and they know instead of interrupting to ask what a word is, they point to it and look at me.  Don’t popcorn read in small reading groups!  It just doesn’t work and is outdated.

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Writing:

LLI has a writing component.  It is split into three different ways to teach writing: interactive, dictated, independent.  I like to switch it up, or do even more then one way at a given time.

*Interactive writing:  This is when we work together.  The children write on chart paper, or the board and we compose sentences, or a story about what was read taking turns and brainstorming together.

*Dictated writing:  This is when I say sentences and they write it down on their own.  Some students have a difficult time hearing all of the spoken words and putting it down into their writing book.  I realized using a manipulative of some sort to have them put it down for each word they hear in the sentence allows them to make sure they aren’t missing a word.  I like them to also listen to the sentence first and visualize it, then if they need to place the manipulative down, then write.

*Independent writing: This is when the student write on his/her own in their writing book.  They usually do this mostly on testing days while I am doing reading records with other children.  This allows me to see their growth throughout the school year.

Mrs. K ♥

 

Those Tricky Trick Words

Those trick words/sight words can be problematic for MANY children.  There just isn’t a way to tap or sound those words out like many of our other words.  There are no rules, we just need to memorize them.  

There are many ways to make this fun and exciting for your children to learn. 

1.  Flash Cards – They worked for us, they can work for them.  Sure, but they are super boring!

2.  Stamp it out! – Get those letter stamps and have them stamp the word out

3.  Put it in different sentences and have them read the sentence to you. 

4.  Word Searches, you can make these free online using their trick words from school, just seeing the words over and over again will familiarize them to the work. 

5.  Cookie Trays! Yup, grab a cookie tray and some magnetic letters and go for it!  

6.  White Boards

7.  Shaving Cream – See my previous post… it’s not as messy as it may seem!  Smells great too! 

8.  Place each letter of the trick/sight word on a card and call out a word and have them make that word,  

9.  Write the word and have them rainbow write over it (use 3 colors to trace over the word) – this allows them to re-write that word THREE times! 

10.  Mix the word up with other words and have them find that trick word in the bunch and circle them all. 

11.  Chant It!  

     “Can you say the word with me?”

     No spell it!

     Now shout it!

    Now whisper it!

     Now clap it!

    Now Stomp it!

     Now shout it! 

12.  Sky write those words!

13. Play a game while driving in the car – say the word and have them spell it.  Or have THEM read the word to you and you spell it, (spell it wrong once in a while so they laugh and correct YOU)  having your child teach you or others is one of the best ways to learn. 

 

There are so many other fun activities to do with practicing trick words – I will add to the list as I come up with more 🙂

 

~Mrs. K ♥

Shaving Cream Fun

Yes, every now and again it’s ok to have some fun! We love writing our new Fundation words in shaving cream. Today we practiced our fluency drills for Fundations. Trust me, if you haven’t done this before, it’s not as bad/messy as it may seem. It washes off their hands super easy, comes right off the table ( I usually use a dry paper towel first to get the majority off first and then use a Clorox wipe to clean), and it makes the room smell really good too!

Shaving Cream IMG_6755 IMG_6756

Mrs. K