Ch8 Flashcards

1
Q

this describes the type of word knowledge that more advanced readers and writers develop in the final stage

A

derivational relations

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2
Q

word sorts in this final level do this

A

generally have more to do with vocabulary development rather than spelling development

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3
Q

t/f exploring the logic underlying correct spellings of these words not only helps us learn and remember the correct spelling but, more importantly, leads to a deeper understanding of how words work

A

t

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4
Q

t/f this is a generative process

A

t

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5
Q

readers in this stage develop their understanding of this layer of orthography

A

meaning

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6
Q

meaning chunks

A

morphemic

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7
Q

picking up on the meaning chunks in morphology, which cross syllable boundaries and offer insights into the meaning of the word

A

morphemic analysis

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8
Q

the generative morphological processes by which meaningful word parts combine; form of teaching

A

teaching about words

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9
Q

what is a big purpose of concept sorts

A

they activate background knowledge and generate interest in and questions about the topic

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10
Q

t/f a teacher has to continue to model their own use and curiosity about dictionaries to help student’s word conciousness

A

t

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11
Q

doing this and creating words provides a powerful knowledge base for learning vocabulary and spelling and facilitating more effective reading and writing

A

exploring word origins

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12
Q

the study of word origins and may develop into a lifelong fascination for many students

A

etymology

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13
Q

t/f understand a word’s origin provides the most powerful key to remembering the spelling

A

t

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14
Q

misspellings at the derivational relations stage appear similar to those at the syllables and affixes stage; these errors occur here and with the vowel in unaccented or unstressed syllables

A

syllable juncture

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15
Q

polysyllabic words often have these where the vowel is reduced to the schwa sound

A

unaccented syllables

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16
Q

t/f words that are related in meaning are often related in spelling as well despite change in sound

17
Q

word meaning is studied originally in the syllables and affixes stage when students study these

18
Q

consonants that are silent in one word are sometimes “sounded” in a related word, or pronunciation of the consonants changes when a suffix is added to words

A

consonant alternation

19
Q

strategy that students use to remember the spelling of a silent consonant in a word

A

think of a word related in spelling and meaning

20
Q

occurs in related words in which the spelling of the vowels remains the same despite and alternation or change in the sound represented by the spelling

A

vowel alternation

21
Q

least accented vowel sound

A

schwa or reduced vowels

22
Q

usually refers to a base or word root together with any derivational affixes that have been added

23
Q

base word

A

free morpheme

24
Q

word root

A

bound morpheme

25
spellings may pose a significant challenge for students because they depend on considerable prior knowledge about other basic spelling-meaning patterns, process of adding prefixes to base words, and simple Greek/Latin roots
assimilated or absorbed prefixes
26
t/f administering the USI more accurately identifies what features students need to study in the late syllables and affixes and early dervational relations stages
t
27
in this stage students have mastered most syllable juncture conventions; they are working through the juncture conventions that govern the spelling; still learning that meaning is a clue to spelling unstressed vowels
early/middle
28
in this stage students will not reach it until at least middle or high school; they can spell most new academic vocabulary words correctly when first encountering them; use but confuse prefixes and some suffixes
late
29
t/f less urgency is in this stage because word study for derivational relations is typically spread out over the middle and high school years and beyond
t
30
sorts at this stage should stretch how long
two sometimes three weeks
31
words in different languages that share similar structures and similar meanings because they share similar origins
cognates
32
types of assessments for this stage
spell studied words, spell and define, base word for them to add suffixes, generate words with suffixes, root, or prefixes, related word where consonant/vowel sound is heard, match to meaning, spell and underline parts, select target word from sentence
33
words and word elements selected for study should be this which means that when possible teach about words in "meaning families"
generative
34
balance these two things
teacher direction and exploration
35
routines that focus on these are very important
meanings of words
36
these are an integral part of word learning at this stage
word study notebooks/vocabulary notebooks