Learning to Read, Write, and Spell Words in English as a New Language
Numeric Spelling
A number name is included in a word or sentence with the expectation that it will be pronounced by its number name. EX. gr8 for great
Logograms
A symbol that represents a word rather than a sound
Digraph
A union of two characters representing a single sound.
Consonantal Alphabet
A way of writing in which each symbol represents a consonant sound. Only some of the vowel sounds are written out.
Word Recognition
Accessing and Recognizing individual words
Decoding
Accessing and Recognizing words in connected text
Alphabetic/letter Name Spelling
An alphabet letter is written with the expectation it will be pronounced by its letter name.
Word Calling
Decoding words without comprehending their meaning. Occurs for one of two reasons -- either the words are outside the listening (spoken) vocabulary of the child, or the decoding process is so slow, laborious, and capacity-demanding that the child is unable to pay attention to word meaning.
Generative
A limited number of letters and sounds can be combined to generate an astronomical number of words.
Decodable Words
Words with easy-to-match phonemes and graphemes
Transparent/ Shallow Orthographies
Writing systems that have a close match between sounds and symbols.
Opacity
impenetrably dense; hard to understand
Graphemes
letters
Alphabetic Orthography
Represents each sound with a symbol or symbols
Recoding
Retrieve the word from our listening vocabulary and try to write the letters that represent the sounds of the word.
Deep/ Opaque Orthographies
Symbols that do not match consistently with their phonemes.
Reasoning by Analogy
The development of the ability to predict the meaning of unknown words through familiarity with the frames that surround the unknown element.
Pinyin
The internationally accepted language for China using English alphabet for Chinese sounds
Morphemes
The smallest units of meaning in a language.
Orthographic Depth Hypothesis
This addressed how different writing systems influence the ways children learn to read.
Syllabic Writing System
Uses a consonant-vowel combination as the smallest unit to represent sounds.
Orthographic Transparency or Depth
a consistent relationship between the sounds of a language and the spelling so that a particular sound always has the same spelling
Emoji
a graphical emoticon used to express emotions, attitudes, or situations
Alphabet
a set of letters that can be combined to form words
Invented Spelling
a strategy young children with good phonological awareness skills use when they write
Logographic Writing System
a system in which pictures represent the words of a language (Chinese). If English were treated as a logographic writing system, it would contain over 600,000 pictures.
Syllabary
complete set of syllables in the language
Phonemes
in language, the smallest distinctive sound unit
Phonics
the sounds that letters make and the letters that are used to represent sounds
Numeracy
understanding of the meaning of numbers
Sight Words
words children identify quickly, accurately, and effortlessly. Words that have to be learned as whole words.