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The part of some letters which goes down from the line, e.g. b & d |
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The part of some letters which goes down from the line, e.g. p & g |
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Understanding the meaning carried by symbols |
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Using symbols to express meaning |
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A unit of two letters that represents one sound e.g. th |
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Understanding that, in English, we write from the left to right |
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One that is used often in writing |
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Learning that we write in horizontal lines |
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Spelling as the words sounds |
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Using some letters, usually consonants, to represent the whole word, e.g. bcs for because. This is done when the child is not sure of the correct spelling. |
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Recognised the 4 stages of development - Preparatory stage, consolidation stage, differentiation stage, intergration stage. |
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Basic motor skills develop and principles of the spelling system acquired |
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Children begin to use writing to express what they can already say in speech. Writing closely reflects the patterns of spoken language. There may be colloquialisms, strings of clauses linked by 'and', unfinished sentences |
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Writing begins to diverge from speech and develops its own patterns and organisation. Errors are uncommon at first, as children learn new standards and experiment with new structures found in their reading. Their written work becomes fuller and more diverse as they encounter the need to produce different kinds of writing fir different audiences and purposes. At this point children most need guidance about the structures and functions of written language. They realise that writing is a medium where there is time to reflect, re-think and use language as a way if shaping thought. They therefore begin to draft/revise/edit |
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Writers have such a good command of language that they can vary their stylistic choices at will and develop a personal 'voice'. This continues to develop throughout adult life |
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Outines the 7 stages of writing development which include; scribbling, mock handwriting, mock letters, conventional letters, invented spelling, appropriate spelling and correct spelling |
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Kids make random marks on the page, which aren't related to letters or words. They're learning the skill of keeping hold of a pencil or crayon, which prepares them for writing. They often talk about what they're scribbling |
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Children practise drawing shapes on paper, althrough it's still not usually possible to work out what the drawing represents. Letter0like forms begin to appear in or with drawings as th efirst sign of emergent writing - an attempt to write letters |
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Children produce random letters, but there's still no awareness of spacing or of matching sounfs with symbols |
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Children start matching sounds with symbols - writing down letters that match the sounds been heard of spoken. Words are unlikely to be spaced out. Children start usimg the initial consonants to represent words, e.g. h for horse. The initial letters might be read out as if the full word is there on the page |
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Most words are spelled phonetically, through some simple familiar words are spelled correctly |
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Sentence become more complex as the child becomes more aware of standard spelling patterns. Writing becomes more legible |
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More words are spelled correctly |
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Discovered the framework for categorising and evaluating children's writing |
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Oun day my mum bought me o some books. And I falte glad
Here the first sentence presents an observation, the second an evaluative comment
Sometimes in longer pieces observation and comment are interspersed
it was a good day at the zoo I liked the ZOO. It was good and fun I had alot of fun I liked the polar-bear and i liked the Hippopotarnus. They are big and fat I liked the pretty birds and i had a good day |
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I bot a dog for my cusen
Rothery and her colleagues observed that teachers consistently rated texts containing observation only less highly than those with added comment |
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This is usually a chronologically organised sequence of events. In more mature examples there may be an orientation at the beginning (usually about travelling to or visting a place of interest) and a reorientation at the end. Its schematic representation is therefore:
Orientation/Event/Reorientation
The recount is more like a narrative genre than observation/comment. Recounts and narratives are both temporally sequenced; in recounts, however, events proceed smoothly, while in narrative we are kept in some state of uncertainty reguarding the outcome of the story. |
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This gives a factual objective description of events of objects. Reports by more mature writers have the schematic structure: General classification/description. Reports differ from recounts in that there is no chronological sequence of events:
The bat is a nocturnal animalm it lives in the dark There are long niosed bats and mouse eared bats also lettuce winged bats Bats hunt st nittg they sleep in the day and are very shy |
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This is distimct from a recount because of the inclusion of events that constitute a problem or complication of some kind. This complication has to be resolved for better or worse. The narratives begins with an orientation which usually gives a temporal or spatial setting for the events to follow. This is followed by complication and resolution. At the end there may be a coda which states the point of telling the story. Often the orientation in early narratives introduces the main character.
THE LONELY STRAY DOG
Once there was a dog named Whiskers He got run over because he ran in front of a car. He was very sick after. He had to be ruched to hospital by
Ambulence and fast. At the end he ended up dieing isn't the sad'
In more 'mature' narratives, complication and resolution can occur more than once. The schematic structure for narrative can be represented as follows:
Orentation/Complication/Resolution/Coda
In their research Rothery and her colleagues found no true narratives (in terms of a distinctive schematic structure) by very young writers. They feel this genre is more likely to be taken up in the third year of schooling |
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Discovered the four development stages of spelling |
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- Pre-letter writing
- Random writing on page - letters, symbols, numbers
- May use repetition of familiar letters - such as the letters in child's name
- Uses left-to-right directionality
- Uses random sight words
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- Leaves random spaces in writing
- Uses few unknown words in the correct place - i.e. names
- Shows letter-sound correspondence - uses initial consonants and partial mapping of word (2 or 3 letters)
- Reads back accuratley at conference
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- Total mapping of letter-sound correspondence
- Vowels are omited when not heard
- Writes quickly
- Spaces words correctly
- Letters are assigned strictly on the basis of sound br=bar or prt=party
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- Vowels appear in every syllable
- Silent "e" pattern becomes fixed
- Inflectional endings like "s", "ing" are used
- Common letter sequences are used (ay, ee, ow)
- Child moves toward visual spelling
- May include all, but reverse some, letters (from=form)
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