Word Analysis Flashcards

1
Q

Deep orthography

A

Letter-sound correspondence in English is inconsistent

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2
Q

Phonics strategies for ELLs

A

emphasizing letters that may have different pronunciations in English than in the students’ native language

grouping words that contain similar sound patterns, using charts and word banks to categorize words according to similar patterns

practicing concepts (like letter recognition, pronunciation of specific sounds, and inflectional endings) in context using content material

providing visual representations to help with identification and understanding of vocabulary

clarifying and reviewing the meanings of new words as they are introduced

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3
Q

Word analysis

A

How to break words down into their smallest units of meaning, the morphemes

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4
Q

Cognates

A

Words similar in both languages

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5
Q

Phonics

A

Understanding the relationship between letters and sounds

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6
Q

Structural/morphemic analysis

A

Using knowledge of word parts (morphemes)

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7
Q

Contextual analysis

A

Using surrounding information in a text to help determine a word

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8
Q

Derivational Affix

A

Alters the meaning or part of speech of a word. Can be prefixes and suffixes

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9
Q

Inflectional Affix

A

Alters the form of the word; typically does not change the part of speech. Usually only suffixes

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10
Q

6 types of syllables in English:

A
  1. Closed
  2. Open
  3. Vowel-consonant-e (VCe)
  4. Vowel Team (digraphs and diphthongs)
  5. Final stable
  6. R-controlled
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11
Q

Semantic cueing system

A

Draws on cues for meaning

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12
Q

Syntactic cueing system

A

Draws on structural cues

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13
Q

Graphophonic cueing system

A

Draws on visual cues

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14
Q

Free roots

A

Can stand alone (help, love, friend, etc.)

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15
Q

Bound roots

A

Cannot stand alone (geo, omni, etc.)

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16
Q

5 different types of context clues:

A
  1. Inference
  2. Definition
  3. Example
  4. Antonym
  5. Synonym
17
Q

Denotative meaning

A

Literal or dictionary meaning

18
Q

Connotative meaning

A

Words that have a secondary meaning. Use context clues to figure out what the word means.

19
Q

Etymology

A

The history of a word

20
Q

Precommunicative spelling stage

A

The child uses symbols from the alphabet but shows no knowledge of letter-sound correspondences

21
Q

Semiphonetic stage

A

The child begins to understand letter-sound correspondence — that sounds are assigned to letters

22
Q

Phonetic stage

A

The child uses a letter or group of letters to represent every speech sound that they hear in a word

23
Q

Transitional stage

A

During the transitional stage, students evidence a growing knowledge of spelling patterns and phonics rules, but may misapply these rules in some places.

24
Q

Conventional stage

A

Children spell most words correctly, with a reliance on phonics knowledge to spell longer words

25
Q

Stages of writing and spelling:

A
  1. Precommunicative
  2. Semiphonetic
  3. Phonetic
  4. Transitional
  5. Conventional
26
Q

Activities for spelling

A

Use word webs and families to practice common spelling patterns.

Practice rhyming activities to help students identify common phonemes and spelling patterns.

Select activities that identify common roots, prefixes, or suffixes.

Build on word families to expand students’ spelling abilities. An example of a word building activity is to begin with small words or word parts such as at, it, ick, et, and ot. Students make as many words as they can from a word or word part in a specific amount of time. It is usually fun to do this as a class or small group activity.

Keep available and review phonological/alphabet games and activities to help encourage conventional spelling.