A few entering- and emerging-level English learners in a fifth-grade SEI class are students with limited or interrupted formal education (SLIFE). Initial screenings indicate that the students lack basic phonemic awareness skills. During small-group instruction in the English language arts (ELA) block, the SEI teacher begins teaching the students techniques for identifying, segmenting, and blending the phonemes in regular single-syllable vocabulary words. In addition to using oral cues and pictures, which of the following instructional strategies would be most effective?
  1. Incorporating additional developmental activities, such as generating rhymes, counting syllables, and blending the onset/rime of target words.
  2. Asking the students to take turns reading simple printed advertisements, using visual context clues from the ads to determine the meanings of unfamiliar words.
  3. Engaging the students in beginning writing activities in which phonetic spelling and conventional spelling are equally valued as tools for learning new vocabulary words.
  4. Using printed words as prompts to emphasize the relationship between phonemes and letters and to build a foundation for future phonics skills instruction.
Explanation
Correct Response: D: Using printed words as prompts provides English learners who lack basic phonemic awareness skills with a visual support in addition to the supports already provided by context (pictures) and auditory cues. Using printed words for phonemic awareness instruction also helps accelerate the students' reading development because it helps them make explicit connections between sounds (phonemes) and letters or letter combinations. The skills targeted by A are lower-level phonological awareness skills that precede the skills that the students are working on. B is incorrect because it describes a contextual word-identification/vocabulary-learning strategy, which does not build phonemic awareness. C is incorrect because spelling patterns, including phonics-based patterns, rely on students' understanding of letter-sound (grapheme-phoneme) correspondence, which the students in the scenario have likely not yet developed. 
Was this helpful? Upvote!
Login to contribute your own answer or details

Top questions

Related questions

Most popular on PracticeQuiz