Saturday 12 November 2016

DECODING STRATEGIES FOR BEGINNING READERS



Halimah Bello-Osagie is a Nigerian nursery school teacher. I met her as a teacher trainee a few years back and her passion for teaching was glaring.This is about five years later and what I see now is an explosion of beautiful fragrances from a resourceful,ever learning and growing teacher. Let's ride with her as she takes us through this enlightening and helpful journey. 


GROUPING PUPILS
         Group according to their reading level
         Grouping should be flexible: Be willing to move pupils to the next reading level when progress is observed.
         Read with struggling pupils everyday: Create time to read with struggling pupils as this will motivate the pupil and encourage progress.
When grouping, be sure to ask yourself;
         What are they doing well?
         What do they need to work on?
When a pupil looks up to you for help while reading, do not give up the answer. Ask them;
    1. Will the picture help you figure it out?
    2. What can you try?
    3.  Is there a part of the word that you know?
Teach pupils to check for these while reading:
       ·       Structure; does it sound right?
       ·       Visual; does it look right?

       ·       Meaning; does it make sense?  
Decoding Strategies
1.       Eagle Eye: Teach pupils to look at the pictures for clues.


  


To make this fun for pupils, you can use a magnifying glass. Also child can highlight the word the picture helps read. Re-read the book several time.

 2.       Lips the fish: Teach pupils to sound the first letter of the word that is challenging. Example: Fish


3.       S-t-r-e-t-c-h-y Snake: We teach children that words are made up of sounds. Teach pupils to sound the letters of the challenging word and stretch them to get the right pronunciation. Example; p-i-g = pig


4.     Chunky Monkey: Chunk the word. Look for the part you know. Example: cat, grandma


5.       Flippy Dolphin: Flip the vowel sound and try the other
vowel sound if it does not sound right. Example: cake


6.       Skippy frog: Skip the tricky word, read to the end, hop back and try again. Example: A Giraffe has a long neck. GIRAFFE!
                 
7.  Tryin’ Lion: Keep trying and don’t give up. Re read the sentence and try a word that makes sense. If you are confused, start again. 

8.       Helping kangaroo: After you have tried all other strategies, ask for help!

                                  By Halimah Bello-Osagie