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The argle zoolked the bordiddy
in the ershant because the
bordiddy larped the argle.
Learning about the process of reading from a
nonsense sentence.
Write the sentence at the top
of your paper leaving space
for an illustration
Visualize the Meaning
 Draw a picture to illustrate the meaning of
this sentence to you.
 Don’t show your illustrations to each other
yet.
 Remember readers can visualize, or form
mental images of, what the words in the text
describe. Notice what difficulties you
encounter in visualizing for this sentence
made up of pseudowords.
Text to Class Connection Possibility
 “No text is self explanatory. In interpreting a
text, readers draw on their store of
knowledge about the topic of the text.
Readers use this prior knowledge to fill in
gaps in the message and to integrate the
different pieces of information in the
message. That is to say, readers “construct”
the meaning.” (pg. 9 in Becoming a Nation of
Readers, 1985)
We choral read the sentence.
 How did we know how to pronounce
nonsense words such as: argle, bordiddy,
ershant and larped?
 Did you sound out the words letter by letter?
 Did you use knowledge of real words to
pronounce the words?
Text – Class Connection
Phoneme Segmentation
 “How do readers go about learning new
words? In several ways. For example, if a
child failed to recognize clutched on a first
exposure, the teacher would remind the child
to break the word into parts: cl + utch + ed.”
(pg. 10 What makes a good teacher of
reading and writing, 2005)
Readers must successfully use three
cueing systems to read for meaning.
 To decode and understand the meaning of a
text, readers use information from many
interrelated systems. These systems provide
cues to make meaning clear.
 Graphophonic cues
 Semantic cues
 Syntactic cues
Reading calls for knowledge of
Graphophonic Cues
 Knowledge of letter-sound correspondences is sometimes
referred to as “graphophonic cues.”
 One permanent feature of a written word is the sequence of its
letters.
 The fact that sequence is a distinctive feature is apparent in
words like: tap, pat, apt.
 To teach the significance of letter sequence, some teachers
have children spell words when they are being taught. Name,
spell, and rename.
 Readers with more than a fourth grade reading ability make
almost no mistakes with regular pseudowords.
Reading calls for knowledge of
Syntactic Cues
 What part of speech is: argle, zoolked, bordiddy,
larped and ershant?
 How do you know?
 Syntax is the way words are put together in a
language to form phrases, clauses, or sentences.
 Syntactic cues are hints based on the order of words
that helps a reader comprehend.
 Syntactic cues are also known as: grammatical cues
Reading calls for knowledge of
Semantic Cues
Semantic cues are sources of help for words that
derive from the collective meanings of all the other
words.
For example, the meanings of certain words (run)
depend on the other words that surround them:
1. Can you run the store?
2. Can you run in the election?
3. Can you run in the race?
Semantic cues, unlike syntactic cues, are not confined
to the sentence.
1. “This room is hot. Turn on the ____________ .”
What is reading comprehension?
 Who zoolked the bordiddy?
 Why did the argle zoolk the bordiddy in the
ershant?
 What did the bordiddy do to the argle?
Compare your illustrations for the
sentence.
 What similarities are there?
 What are the differences?
 What did you comprehend?
 What were you unable to comprehend?
 Why interfered with reading comprehension?
Five Major Areas of Reading as they relate to
the cueing systems.
 Phonemic Awareness (Graphophonic Cues)
 Phonics (Graphophonic Cues)
 Fluency (All three cueing systems)
 Vocabulary (Syntactic & Semantic Cues)
 Comprehension (Syntactic & Semantic
Cues)
Marty is digging a hole for the tree.
 Draw a picture to illustrate the meaning
you’ve constructed for the sentence.
 Compare pictures: How are they similar and
how are they different?
 How did you use the three cueing systems to
construct meaning from the sentence?

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Using a nonsense sentence to explain the process of reading

  • 1. The argle zoolked the bordiddy in the ershant because the bordiddy larped the argle. Learning about the process of reading from a nonsense sentence. Write the sentence at the top of your paper leaving space for an illustration
  • 2. Visualize the Meaning  Draw a picture to illustrate the meaning of this sentence to you.  Don’t show your illustrations to each other yet.  Remember readers can visualize, or form mental images of, what the words in the text describe. Notice what difficulties you encounter in visualizing for this sentence made up of pseudowords.
  • 3. Text to Class Connection Possibility  “No text is self explanatory. In interpreting a text, readers draw on their store of knowledge about the topic of the text. Readers use this prior knowledge to fill in gaps in the message and to integrate the different pieces of information in the message. That is to say, readers “construct” the meaning.” (pg. 9 in Becoming a Nation of Readers, 1985)
  • 4. We choral read the sentence.  How did we know how to pronounce nonsense words such as: argle, bordiddy, ershant and larped?  Did you sound out the words letter by letter?  Did you use knowledge of real words to pronounce the words?
  • 5. Text – Class Connection Phoneme Segmentation  “How do readers go about learning new words? In several ways. For example, if a child failed to recognize clutched on a first exposure, the teacher would remind the child to break the word into parts: cl + utch + ed.” (pg. 10 What makes a good teacher of reading and writing, 2005)
  • 6. Readers must successfully use three cueing systems to read for meaning.  To decode and understand the meaning of a text, readers use information from many interrelated systems. These systems provide cues to make meaning clear.  Graphophonic cues  Semantic cues  Syntactic cues
  • 7. Reading calls for knowledge of Graphophonic Cues  Knowledge of letter-sound correspondences is sometimes referred to as “graphophonic cues.”  One permanent feature of a written word is the sequence of its letters.  The fact that sequence is a distinctive feature is apparent in words like: tap, pat, apt.  To teach the significance of letter sequence, some teachers have children spell words when they are being taught. Name, spell, and rename.  Readers with more than a fourth grade reading ability make almost no mistakes with regular pseudowords.
  • 8. Reading calls for knowledge of Syntactic Cues  What part of speech is: argle, zoolked, bordiddy, larped and ershant?  How do you know?  Syntax is the way words are put together in a language to form phrases, clauses, or sentences.  Syntactic cues are hints based on the order of words that helps a reader comprehend.  Syntactic cues are also known as: grammatical cues
  • 9. Reading calls for knowledge of Semantic Cues Semantic cues are sources of help for words that derive from the collective meanings of all the other words. For example, the meanings of certain words (run) depend on the other words that surround them: 1. Can you run the store? 2. Can you run in the election? 3. Can you run in the race? Semantic cues, unlike syntactic cues, are not confined to the sentence. 1. “This room is hot. Turn on the ____________ .”
  • 10. What is reading comprehension?  Who zoolked the bordiddy?  Why did the argle zoolk the bordiddy in the ershant?  What did the bordiddy do to the argle?
  • 11. Compare your illustrations for the sentence.  What similarities are there?  What are the differences?  What did you comprehend?  What were you unable to comprehend?  Why interfered with reading comprehension?
  • 12. Five Major Areas of Reading as they relate to the cueing systems.  Phonemic Awareness (Graphophonic Cues)  Phonics (Graphophonic Cues)  Fluency (All three cueing systems)  Vocabulary (Syntactic & Semantic Cues)  Comprehension (Syntactic & Semantic Cues)
  • 13. Marty is digging a hole for the tree.  Draw a picture to illustrate the meaning you’ve constructed for the sentence.  Compare pictures: How are they similar and how are they different?  How did you use the three cueing systems to construct meaning from the sentence?