Estudio individualizado continuo de palabras (ortografía, morfología, etimología)
En este curso, la Dra. Karen Wieland, practicante acreditada en dislexia del Sistema de Lectura Wilson, brinda instrucción integral personalizada relacionada con la decodificación, codificación, desarrollo de vocabulario, fluidez de lectura y comprensión lectora.
Qué está incluido
Se reúne bajo demanda
programar reuniones según sea necesario75 minutos
por sesiónApoyo docente
Tarea
1-2 horas por semana. Homework will be determined on an individual basis. Typically, If using the Wilson Reading System for instruction, I provide word lists and sentences for decoding, fluency, and dictated spelling practice, and short passages for oral reading fluency practice. I ask students, with the support of family members, to devote about an hour each week to skills and strategy practice. I also encourage daily independent or shared reading of self-selected text. If using a Latin, Greek, and French roots and affixes (structured word inquiry( approach to word study, learners commit to investigating and compiling notes about specific target word elements, using the approaches modeled in the lesson and the scaffolds provided within each assignment.Evaluación
Each WRS lesson plan consists of ten subsections/parts that involved decoding, encoding, fluency, vocabulary building, and comprehension. Decoding progress is measured in part 4, encoding in parts 7 and 8, fluency in part 9, and comprehension in part 10. Once a learner has reached the end of every book/level of the 12-book/level WRS program, a posttest is administered to ensure mastery before moving on to more advanced material. The results of these embedded assessments are typed into the Google Docs files used with learners and posted on their classroom page each week.Experiencia de clase
Nivel de inglés - A1
Nivel Beginner - Advanced
DESCRIPTION In this class, Dr. Karen Wieland, a credentialed Wilson Reading System Dyslexia Practitioner, provides one-to-one comprehensive instruction related to decoding, encoding, vocabulary development, reading fluency, and reading comprehension. WHAT IS THE WILSON READING SYSTEM? The Wilson Reading System (WRS) is one of several structured, systematic, sequential, multisensory phonics programs that is often recommended for students who experience dyslexia or similar language-related learning difficulties/disabilities. - This instructional approach is STRUCTURED, because it teaches the structure of the English language: phonology ("the sound structure of spoken words" (IDA, xxxx), sound-symbol associations, syllable patterns/types, syntax (grammar), morphology (basewords, roots, affixes), and semantics (meaning structures). - This approach is also SYSTEMATIC in that every credentialed WRS practitioner uses the same general lesson format and the same general teaching techniques, though lessons are designed individually to meet the needs of specific learners. - In addition, this approach is SEQUENTIAL. The curriculum follows a "scope and sequence" that introduces and reinforces information, skills, and strategies, layer by layer. Every credentialed practitioner follows this scope and sequence. - This instructional approach is also a MULTISENSORY, in that it activates learners' visual, auditory, and kinesthetic-tactile learning pathways. - Wilson Reading System (WRS) is one of several PHONICS-based programs designed for struggling and striving literacy learners. Wilson is considered to be a derivative of the Orton-Gillingham approach, and it widely used by school, reading clinics, and private practitioners in the literacy re/mediation of students who experience dyslexia and other language-based learning difficulties. The more advanced levels of WRS also include MORPHOLOGICAL components (Latin and Greek roots and affixes). WRS students gain understanding of the three layers of English orthography (spelling): (1) the alphabetic layer, which is learned through the methodical practice of sound-symbol relationships; (2) the pattern layer, which is learned through the careful study of the six main types of syllables in English words; and (3) the meaning layer, which is learned through the study of a select number of prefixes and suffixes, and a multitude of basewords. NOTE: If the student has not done previous Wilson work with me, I will need to set up an individualized session to do some formative assessment before beginning instruction. HOW DO I KNOW IF THIS TYPE OF INSTRUCTION IS RIGHT FOR MY CHILD? -- If your child's reading fluency (word recognition accuracy, reading rate, expression/prosody) AND his/her spelling are significantly below grade-level expectations, or if his/her spelling alone is significantly below grade-level, s/he likely would benefit from a structured, systematic, sequential, multisensory phonics approach. -- If your child has been diagnosed by a school psychologist or educational psychologist as experiencing dyslexia or another language-based learning disability, s/he likely would benefit from a structured, systematic, sequential, multisensory phonics approach. NOTE: This course is for students who have not yet had any WRS instruction or any other Orton-Gillingham-based program. If your child has had small-group or individualized instruction that sounds similar to the Wilson program, please write the instructor to talk about your child joining the student group once all the students are a bit more advanced. WHAT THEORETICAL MODEL SUPPORTS THIS APPROACH TO TEACHING DECODING AND ENCODING SKILLS AND STRATEGIES? According to LaBerge and Samuel’s theory of automatic information processing in reading (Samuels, 2004/1994), a reader has only finite cognitive capacity (attention, working memory) to devote to the reading process. If the reader has to use too much of his/her cognitive capacity for the purposes of word recognition, then this limits his/her ability to focus on meaning-making. This theory suggests that the more automatic an individual’s word recognition abilities, the more attention can be allocated to text comprehension and learning from text. Similarly, a writer who devotes most of his/her cognitive capacity to spelling has less attention or working memory free to devote to meaning-making and communication. One of the ways to increase a reader’s word recognition abilities is to teach him/her strategies for figuring out words that s/he does not recognize automatically on sight, including phonic decoding and orthographic analogy strategies. By applying knowledge of common graphophonic and orthographic patterns to the analysis of an unfamiliar word, a reader can often arrive at a correct (or close-to-correct) pronunciation of the word. Then the reader can compare this pronunciation to words stored in his/her lexicon (the individual’s mental storehouse of word meanings) in order to comprehend the word. With sufficient practice, words identified using phonic decoding and orthographic analogy strategies become familiar and eventually become part of the reader’s sight vocabulary. Similarly, one of the ways to increase a writer's spelling abilities is to teach him/her strategies for breaking words into syllables and representing those syllables in print. By applying knowledge of common syllable patterns in English, a writer can often arrive at a correct (or close to correct) spelling of a the word. With sufficient practice, words spelled using this approach become familiar and eventually become part of the learner's writing vocabulary.
Metas de aprendizaje
Learner goals will be determined on an individual basis. They will include mastering the phonic, orthographic, morphological, and etymological content corresponding to the learner's place on the WRS scope and sequence, as well as other goals ascertained t
Otros detalles
Necesidades de aprendizaje
As a literacy specialist and Wilson Dyslexia Practitioner, I readily adapt my materials and instruction to support neurodivergent students who experience ADHD, dyslexia, dysgraphia, and ASD.
Orientación para padres
I use Google Docs and Google Slides to create lesson materials for the learners. I set the files so that they can be edited anonymously, meaning that both the learner and I can typed within the files simultaneously. I use QuizletLive and Wordwall to create study games for learners that they can play with me using my shared screen and on their own with parental supervision between sessions.
Requisitos previos
Not applicable.
Experiencia y certificaciones del docente
Nueva York Certificado de Docencia
3 Grado
Doctorado desde State University of New York at Buffalo
Maestría desde State University of New York at Buffalo
Licenciatura en Música o Teatro o Artes desde The Catholic University of America
I am a dedicated and creative literacy specialist and Latin language teacherwith 30 years of experience working with students of all ages. I hold permanent certification from New York State in Reading (grades K-12). I am also a credentialed Wilson Reading System dyslexia practitioner. In addition to the individualized work I do with learners on the Outschool platform, I teach a 9-course, three-academic-year series called Introduction to Latin. I also teach a 6-course series called Vocabulary Building with Roots and Affixes.
I have extensive experience with Orton-Gow methods for literacy re/mediation; the foundation for that work was the introductory training I received through the Gow Teacher Training Institute. I taught Orton-Gow (Reconstructive Language) at the Gow School and the Gow School Summer Program for several years. Before shifting into private practice, I was a full-time teacher educator and university reading center director, and I helped to prepare several hundred reading teachers and literacy specialists in NY and PA.
I completed my undergraduate degree at The Catholic University of America School of Music. My doctoral and master’s degrees were earned at the University at Buffalo School of Education, under the advisement of Dr. Michael W. Kibby, a nationally known literacy diagnostician and scholar. I have presented my research related to vocabulary acquisition and development at several national and international conferences, including Literacy Research Association, International Reading Association, and International Dyslexia Association.
Reseñas
Lecciones 1 a 1 en vivo
80 US$
por sesiónReuniones bajo pedido
75 min
Completado por 2 alumnos
Videoconferencias en vivo
Edades: 11-16