October 28

Number Corners Visual Resource for Each Grade Level and Month

I know we have been talking quite a bit about Number Corner and Bridges and finding the time to really read through and understand the major focuses of the mathematical teaching.  One thing that was shared with me recently on a Facebook group that I am a part of is that they are developing a Number Corner preview by month and November is now available.  The videos are full of great information and would be another way to gain some insight into what you will be doing with students during Number Corner.  It appears that most of them are about 30 minutes in length depending on the grade.  These would be great to watch together as a team perhaps during Collaboration Monday time.
To access the videos:
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October 19

A Step-by-Step Plan for Elementary Level Student-Led Conferences

Confession: I look forward to parent conferences. I value the opportunity to connect with families face-to-face. But discussing report cards? Ugh. After 16 years of traditional parent conferences, I decided to make a good thing even better.

Student-led conferences intrigued me. The basic concept: students lead the conferences about their academic progress. They take ownership of their learning experience, sitting at the table with parents and teachers. Older students generally share their body of work through portfolios and work samples.

But how could it look for primary students? Nine years into implementing student-led conferences with primary students, I’ve found this is the key: have students demonstrate what they can do.

What Happens at a Student-Led Conference

Parents come into the classroom with their children. Together, families visit four learning stations set up around the classroom. I schedule two conferences every half-hour period. Families move from station to station as they complete each task.

Each station is designed to take about five minutes. Parents can read the instructions and interact with their children, but should observe and not participate in the activities. I circulate around the stations, answering questions and providing feedback on student progress.

students leading a conference

The Benefits of Student-Led Conferences

  • Students actually show parents what they know and are learning in school.
  • Parents are exposed to materials and activities that students engaged in during the school day.
  • Teachers can observe interactions, comment, offer suggestions, and model strategies.
  • Students, parents, and the teacher are all active participants in the conference.

Where to Start

1) Decide on areas to highlight. (I usually choose reading, writing, math and science.)

2) Consider what students should know and be able to do in those areas at this time of year. What is most important? (Keep in mind that less is more; you cannot address everything in 20 minutes.)

3) Identify simple activities to demonstrate students’ understanding of specific standards.

4) Figure out how to organize and set up the activities.

What It Can Look Like

My conference stations typically involve large display boards and tubs, but I have colleagues who use large plastic Ziploc bags or who just place materials on students’ desks. Whatever you use, make sure it is simple to take out and put away. Instructions should be easy to follow.

Example One: Science

elementary student science project

Example Two: Reading

elementary student reading project

Example Three: Math 

elementary student math project

Example Four: Writing

elementary student writing project

Helpful Tips for Organizing Student-Led Conferences

  • Keep it simple. One- to three-step directions work best. You want for your students to be able to show what they know—not to leave parents trying to figure what they are supposed to do.
  • Limit handouts. I once provided rubrics, standards, and lots of home activities at each station—but most parents didn’t take them. A sheet for jotting down notes is all that parents really need. You can post additional handouts online or provide them per request.
  • Provide translations. Provide pathways for non-English-speaking parents to participate. I try to schedule Spanish-speaking parents at the same time, so that I can make sure there is someone to translate for them. If there is no translator available, I make sure directions are translated ahead of time.
  • Together is better. Find a buddy! I once asked two colleagues to join me in trying out student-led conferences and we split the amount of work, each taking on a subject and creating stations for the others. My kindergarten colleagues are now doing student-led conferences, so when students and parents come to me in first grade, they already know what to expect!
  • Practice with students. This is the best way to try out your stations.  Introduce each task so that students know what to expect when they arrive.

Yes, this is more work than sitting down with each set of parents, but trust me, it’s worth the effort. Students feel ownership of their learning and look forward to showing their parents what they know.

Parents get a much better sense of what is happening at school and how to continue that at home.

Anyone else out there doing student-led conferences with students in the primary grades? Please share your experiences.

Topics: New TeachersAssessmentEngagementTeacher-Family EngagementCommunicating with Families

Jane Fung

Written by Jane Fung

Center for Teaching Quality is writing a series of blogs in partnership with Teaching Channel. CTQ is transforming the teaching profession through the bold ideas and expert practices of teacher leaders. Jane Fung is a National Board Certified Teacher in urban Los Angeles, where she currently teaches 1st grade. She serves on the board of the National Commission on Teaching and America’s Future, and she is an active member of Accomplished California Teachers, Milken Educator Network, and the Center for Teaching Quality’s Collaboratory. Jane has a master’s degree in curriculum and instruction and 25 years of teaching experience.

October 19

Literacy Activities That Boost Content Learning

Literacy Activities That Boost Content Learning

A MiddleWeb Blog

In classes like social studies and science, students are expected to do complex nonfiction reading, but how can we ensure that they retain the content so that they can transfer it for future use?

One method is to ask students to represent the information in different forms, helping them grow their ability to think flexibly and critically.

These activities fall under “generalization” on the learning hierarchy and push students to use the information in a new way, making it more useful, and therefore, harder to forget.

Understanding the Math We Teach

These are some of the strategies that I have used in my classes. I am eager to add to the list.

Blackout Summaries

Writing blackout poetry is a literacy activity that I’ve used successfully for many years. After reading an article, students use markers to cross out words, leaving only a poem that summarizes what they’ve read.

As with most art, constraints improve the output: limit the number of words that students can use in a row, or set a minimum or maximum number of words.

Once the activity is complete, I like to have each table group choose the best from their team and then hang those around the classroom for a gallery walk. When they see the commonalities between the poems, it reinforces the main ideas of the text.

Scrambled Sections

During our study of world religions, I wanted to ensure students thoughtfully read an article about the Dalai Lama. To get them talking and processing, I spaced the Newsela article into segments and cut it into strips.

In small groups, students read the sections and arranged them into what they thought was the correct order. Once they had read it through and were sure that they had it right, I gave them the original article, printed in a different color.

I liked the reasoning in student conversations that arose from this activity. As an observer, I was also able to see which students were using text features to achieve their goal.

Collaborative Responses

Each student in a table group gets their own color Post-it note, where they write their response to an open-ended question. They then share their responses with each other and decide upon the best, most thoughtful answer.

I would be careful with the pairings for this activity, as sometimes students assume they know who will have the best answer even when it isn’t the case. Each group then shares their chosen response with the class.

Tic Tac Tell

A student completes a Tic Tac Tell summary on the Nazca Lines.

I first learned about this activity from Glenn Weibe’s website many years ago. Vocabulary words related to the article are listed in a nine-block grid. Students then choose three words in a row to use in a paragraph summarizing their understanding. They highlight the selected words in the paragraph.

This would also be a fun way to start a class period by projecting a grid of nine important words from the previous lesson and asking students to share their understanding.

Rank the Evidence

Ask students to read an article or watch a video that has two perspectives; we watched the TED-Ed video on Genghis Khan as “Unifier or Tyrant.”

I gave students eight Post-its, four of each color, and asked them to write one piece of evidence per Post-it that supports each side of the argument. Next they ranked the evidence from strongest to weakest and decided which perspective was more convincing. The final step was to discuss their findings with a partner.

A Few More Quick Ideas

► After students read an article with the title removed, ask them to write what they think would be the best title for it and share with their table groups.

► Give students a photograph from history with conversation bubbles added. Ask them to practice perspective-taking and demonstrate understanding by adding dialogue to the image.

Source: History Tech

► Pair students up with a photo or image centered on a piece of blank paper. Ask them to have a silent, written conversation about what they notice or wonder. This is a great introductory activity that will give you insight into what the students already know about a topic.

Resources

► The Benefits of Deeper Learning: Retention, Transfer and Motivation by Natalie Saaris, 2017 at Actively Learn

► The Instructional Hierarchy: Linking Stages of Learning to Effective Instructional Techniques at Intervention Central

Civically Engaged
October 11

Teaching Channel Talks 47: The New Framework for Teaching

Teaching Channel Talks 47: The New Framework for Teaching

 September 21, 2021 / by Teaching Channel

 

Our Guest

Jim_Circle-1

Dr. Jim Furman has years of teaching experience at middle and high schools around the country. Jim has supported school leaders in urban schools to build and improve systems of teacher professional development; redesigned teacher preparation programs, field experiences, and assessments; and conducted research focused on teacher preparation and adolescent literacy.

Our Host

Wendy_Amato-2

Wendy Amato earned her Master’s in Education and Ph.D. in Curriculum and Instruction from the University of Virginia. She holds an MBA from James Madison University. Wendy began teaching in 1991, has served as a Middle School Administrator, and still teaches at UVA’s School of Education. She has delivered teacher professional development workshops and student leadership workshops in the US and internationally. Wendy and her family live near Charlottesville, Virginia.

October 11

How to Deal with a Chatty Classroom May 17, 2018 / by Lily Jones

ur students just won’t stop talking. You feel like you’re constantly talking over people just to be heard. We’ve all been there!

If your classroom has become too chatty, start by figuring out if the talk is productive or not. Sometimes talking is actually a good thing. If students are talking about the task at hand, you may want to encourage them to continue (just at a quieter volume!). But if students are off task and chatty, this requires a different approach.

Use these tips to help your classroom become more peaceful:

Start Off Quiet

If students come into a chatty classroom, they’re more likely to continue (and possibly increase) the noise. But if they enter a calm and quiet classroom, they’ll be encouraged to keep the same noise level throughout the class. Watch how teacher Marlo Warburton starts her class with a “silent start” and pay attention to the effect it has on the rest of the class.

https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/setting-positive-classroom-tone

VIDEOI Heart a Silent Start

Encourage Active Listening

The flipside to talking is listening. If you engage students in active listening, they’ll be more likely to let one person talk at a time. For young students, just learning how to listen can be a process. Try playing Tootie-Ta to teach listening skills, then encourage whole-body listeningWatch how students of all ages can be engaged in conversations by sharing the contributions other students make.

Screen Shot 2020-02-20 at 12.10.00 PM

VIDEO: Share Who Said That

Try Silent Signals

Silent signals go a long way to decrease the amount of noise in the classroom. Watch how teacher Stacey Brewer uses hand signals to facilitate conversations in her classroom. Want to get ideas for more silent signals to use? Check out how silent signals can build metacognitive skills and how they can be used in the math classroom.

https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/classroom-silent-communication-signals

VIDEO: Communicate Learning with Silent Signals

Use Talk Moves

Sometimes students are chatty because they need help engaging in academic conversation. Teach students how to productively participate in conversations by using talk moves. Talk moves are a great way to develop communication skills and support students in having academic discussions.

https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/student-participation-strategy

VIDEO: Improving Participation with Talk Moves

Channel Chattiness into Productive Talk

Some students are just chattier than others. Watch how teacher Chuck Pack uses extroverts in his classroom and think about how you could channel chattiness into productive talk. Consider using peer teaching as a way for students to talk about their thinking with each other. Check out this video for one example of peer teaching through expert groups.

https://learn.teachingchannel.com/video/expert-groups

VIDEO: Peer Teaching Through Expert Groups

October 11

Getting Started with Bridges Intervention

Getting Started with Bridges Intervention

For those of you utilizing the Bridges Intervention materials, we’ve compiled several Intervention blog posts and resources that will help you get started as a new school year begins.

Interventions – Where Do I Begin?
Information about entry points for Bridges Intervention.

Checkout Systems for Bridges Intervention Kits
Helpful ideas for sharing materials.

Intervention Placement Assessment Tips!
How to use the Placement Assessments.

Assessment Tools for Bridges Intervention
About the Excel-based spreadsheets you can use to score and track student assessment data.

Organizing Bridges Intervention
Especially helpful if you are working from the digital materials on the Bridges Educator Site.

Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities:  7+ Instructional Practices
Instructional practices that make a difference for at-risk learners.

Getting Started with Bridges Intervention
A 23 min. video to help you get started (scroll to the bottom of the page to find it).

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October 11

What Does Strong Implementation of Bridges Intervention Look Like?

May 20, 2021

Effectively implementing an intervention program is a complex process. We all want to ensure our students receiving intervention support get effective instruction. But pressing time constraints and unfamiliarity with a program’s essential components can discourage the use of observation, potentially our most valuable feedback tool. To observe and evaluate intervention instruction, we need to understand what strong implementation looks like.

To give users of Bridges Intervention a clear picture of successful implementation, we now offer the Bridges Intervention Observation Guide. This guide provides teachers, interventionists, coaches, and principals with information to support the use of Bridges Intervention. Aligned to Response to Intervention models, the guide neatly summarizes logistical information such as placement, time management, and classroom organization, as well as instructional practice look-fors throughout each session component. Within the guide, you will find specific information for using Bridges Intervention within the RtI model, highlighting both the intended structure of daily intervention sessions and alternative methods for delivery to address students’ needs across tiers of intervention.

For more information on Bridges Intervention and tips for implementation, see Jennifer Ranum’s blog post Getting Started with Bridges Intervention, which lists related posts by topic with links.

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October 11

What Was Wrong with the Old Way?

We’ve all had those conversations in which someone laments that math isn’t taught the same way it was “in the good ole days.” Our understanding of best practices in mathematics has changed, and change can be difficult for everyone. And it can be especially difficult to a parent who just worked a long day and is now trying to help their student with homework, using strategies they never learned in school.

What Was Wrong with the Old Way?

So how can we help them understand why we’ve changed our strategies for teaching math? I have two key points I try to share with families that have helped to make these conversations productive: comparing math literacy with reading literacy, and the evolution of best practices.

For many years we taught and learned math on a surface level through drills and timed tests. While this practice may have appeared to develop fluency, it didn’t establish a firm math foundation upon which students could build throughout their education. However, in other subjects we provide students with building blocks to help them understand how to construct and deconstruct the big picture and how to apply those skills to different situations. In reading we don’t expect children to memorize every word in the dictionary. That’d be absurd! Instead, we teach them phonics so that they know how words are built and they can apply those deeply understood principals to new words they encounter. This firm foundation supports newer and higher levels of reading with a great level of success.

What Was Wrong with the Old Way?

The way we teach math now, in small but rigorous steps, is giving students the means to take on new and varied applications of mathematics with confidence. In short, we are teaching math phonics.

I recently had the opportunity to hear Rick DuFour speak about how education has changed. He shared a great anecdote about his sister that illustrates why change is needed. Around 40 years ago his sister went to have her vision corrected through surgery. At the time, the procedure required razor blades, an exhaustive number of follow-up trips to the surgeon, and about a year to fully heal. This practice was cutting edge at the time.

Today, if you go to have your vision corrected, they’ll shoot you in the eye with a laser, you’ll go home and take a nap, and usually within 72 hours you’ll have 20/20 vision. Forty years ago we didn’t even know this was possible. The razor blade procedure was not only acceptable, it was considered best practice. If you went to get you vision corrected today and they pulled out a box of blades, it would be considered malpractice. In like fashion, we’ve changed the way we teach math because we know better now. As we continue to research and seek out the best ways to instruct our students, we will encounter change.

I can’t help but wonder, What will replace the laser?

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October 6

So many muches! Grammar errors and what they tell us about language development

 

When kids first begin talking, typically at around 12 months of age, they of course stick to the basics— very short phrases that convey basic wants, needs, and social routines.  Mama.  More.  Up.  Hi!  All-done.  Milk.  Doggy.  Bye-bye.  Oops!  These are mostly one-word phrases and are not pronounced perfectly.  Then, typically when children are between 1 ½ and 2 years old, they take an important step in language learning: making word combinations.  More milk.  Mama car.  Up Daddy.  No doggy.  The intended meaning of early phrases might not be very clear out of context (Mama car could mean “look, there’s mommy’s car” or “here mommy, take my toy car”), but a child at this stage of language development shows us that he is beginning to understand that words are units of meaning that can be combined in novel ways to creating novel meanings, as in Mama car.  Big car.  Car up.  Once we know a good number of words and understand our language’s grammar, we can combine words to generate phrases that explain anything we want.  That is, language is generative.  The possibilities are literally endless.

Sometime around 2 years old, children usually begin using grammatical morphemes, or the little parts of words that make our phrases grammatically complete, and can express nuances like tense and number.  One of the earliest in English is the present progressive -ing, as in crying, eating, going.  Regular plurals (cups) and regular past tense (climbed) are also acquired pretty early on.  As children learn new grammatical forms, they are not just memorizing whole words.  Rather, they are learning the grammatical rules of whatever language (or languages) they are acquiring.  They learn how we can take these little word parts and apply them to other words we know, to create new shades of meaning.  For example, boat means something different than boatswalking means something different than walked.

The morphemes for plural and past tense are a little more complicated than they may appear at first glance.  There are actually three different pronunciations for each of these grammatical markers, depending on the sound at the end of the root word.

Root word ends in: Plural “-s” morpheme sounds like:
/p, t, k, f, th (voiceless)/ /s/ as in cups, hats, snacks, cliffs, baths
/b, d, g, m, n, ng, v, th (voiced), l, r/
and any vowel sound
/z/ as in tubs, beds, bags, drums, hens, songs, doves, lathes, balls, carscows, bees, pies
/s, z, sh, ch, j/ /ez/ as in buses, sizes, bushes, watches, badges
Root word ends in: Past tense “-ed” morpheme sounds like:
/p, k, f, th (voiceless), s, sh, ch/ /t/ as in hopped, walked, coughed, birthed, flossed, washed, watched
/b, g, m, n, ng, v, th (voiced), z, j/
and any vowel sound
/d/ as in rubbed, hugged, hummed, banned, arrived, bathed, buzzed, wagedbowed, peed, tied
/t, d/ /ed/ as in batted, glided

These context-dependent variations on morphemes are called allomorphs.  So using the above examples, /s, z, ez/ are allomorphs of the regular plural morpheme -s, and /t, d, ed/ are allomorphs of the regular past tense morpheme -ed.  Despite the different sounds, children are typically able to learn and apply grammar rules just by talking with adults around them, without even being aware that these variations exist.  Our knowledge of spoken grammar is mostly subconscious: you don’t even know that you know it.  In fact, I would wager that most adults who have not studied linguistics or early literacy instruction are not aware of allomorphs, and also probably can’t easily explain other grammar basics, such as when exactly we use he versus him and that the suffix -ly is used to change an adjective to an adverb.

So how do we know that little kids are actually applying their knowledge of grammatical rules, rather than just learning new grammatical words as whole units, parroting words they have heard mom or dad say?  After all, most 2-year-olds won’t say, “Today I learned that I have to put a ssszzz, or ez at the end of the word to indicate that there is more than one thing.”  How do we know that they know that?

For starters, children will begin to apply a rule more and more consistently, using it across multiple contexts, which suggests that the rule is acquired.  Furthermore, we hear evidence of grammar knowledge in the errors and inventions that are so common in the speech of young children.  When children make errors such as mouses instead of mice, they have not likely heard an adult say the word mouses, meaning they just came up with it on their own.  This is an example of overgeneralization of a grammatical morpheme- using it where it doesn’t actually belong.  While it’s technically not correct to say mouses, it’s a normal stage of language development and shows that the child can generate words using the plural marker.

I recently polled an online parenting forum for examples of such inventions of words.  The post generated a lot of interest, and responses were both adorable and brilliant.  Let’s take a look at some, and see what they tell us about those children’s understanding of spoken grammar.

Quite a few kids demonstrated understanding of present progressing -ing.  As mentioned, it is one of the earlier emerging grammatical morphemes, and so there’s a lot of opportunity for kids to get creative.  There was a girl who said someone doing yoga in the park was namasteing.  A boy was wapping things with his wapping stick.  Another child used puzzling to mean playing with puzzles.  In the autumn, the leaves are fall-downing.  You go grossing at the grocery store.  A truck is back-upping.  And finally, I AM carefulling!!

There was a child who stuck two allomorphs at the end of words to mark plurals: carses, cookieses, toeses.  (Moses supposes his toeses are roses?)  Another child mistook the word much for a noun, and showed her ability to use the plural /ez/ allomorph: so many muches.

soooo many muches!!

One child said at bedtime Can you cush and coze me? meaning that she wanted her mom to make her cushy and cozy.  This represents an understanding of the suffix -y in adjectives.  She knows that -y often means having the quality of the root word (which could be either nouns as in sandy or verbs as in runny), and so invented root word verbs cush and coze.

This next one is particularly genius, in a couple of ways.  A child apparently said that when the family car got new tires, it was retired.  This shows an understanding of the prefix re-, meaning to do something again (to again put tires on a car).  Then, adding -ed in this case changes the word from a noun to an adjective, called a participial adjective (as in I am bored).  Also, we know that retired is a word that actually does exist, although it means something completely different.  Likely this child heard that word at one point, and used his smarts about morphology to infer a possible meaning.  Genius!

Here’s a neat one: a child used willn’t instead of won’t, apparently having analyzed all the other n’t contractions and determining that they should closely resemble the words from which they are derived (as in do-don’t, can-can’t, should-shouldn’t).  So of course the opposite of will is willn’t.  I’d like to see how many grown-ups have thought of that.  Not me, to be honest, and I think about a lot of stuff like this.  Thanks, kiddo, for pointing me towards this explanation.

Another little girl apparently used peace-ify in the place of pacify, I’m guessing in the context of talking about a baby’s pacifier bringing about a moment of peace.  That parent basically has a mini etymologist on her hands, because this kid probably already knows that both peace and pacify come from the Latin word pax, and the suffix -ify changes a word to a verb that means to become the root word.

Similar to the cush and coze example, this one involves the child removing a part of a word.  Hammers are what you use the ham things.  The -er suffix changes a word from an action to a thing that does the action.  Workers work.  Players play.  Hammers ham.  Of course!

I want so badly for this next one to be correct: the child who thought that the opposite of nocturnal was turnal.  It’s brilliant, because a) the kid already knows the word nocturnal b) it still shows awareness that words can break into parts, and c) noc sounds like not, so it’s a pretty reasonable guess!  Alas, in this case, noct comes from the Latin nox for night.  (The opposite of nocturnal is diurnal, which I’m not sure I’ve ever heard in my life.)

Threeth.  Not a word, but the kid who said it gets that the suffix -th is used to express the ordinal numbers such as fourth, twentieth, and billionth (but not first, second, third).

Some kids were able to show understanding of morphemes for negation: dis-, un-, and de-.   One wanted to be disbored (bored of being bored?), another who wanted his friend to be unsick so they could playand another who said he would never delove his mother (I’m not crying, you’re crying!!).

These next ones involve little phrases.  English has many two-word verbs, such as shut down, figure out, fit in, that are often idiomatic phrases (and notoriously difficult for English second-language speakers).  A few parents shared examples that demonstrate that the child knows that grammatically there is such thing as a two-word verb, but hasn’t quite gotten it right: pick me downbuckle me outand tuck me up (ok, that last one is my own son).

Next, some examples from bilingual or multilingual households, where kids sometimes mix vocabulary and grammar from more than one language in the same phrase. For example, a little girl who said lumes to mean that something lit up.  This is a sweet mash-up of French luminer and English -s third person singular. She also used unlâche to tell someone let go of something.  This shows that she likely knows the un- English morpheme for negation, but lâche in French already means let go.

Another bilingual child was mad because her brother retruired her castle.  The child combined re-, détruir (destroy)and the English past tense -ed.  Seems like someone wrecked that castle a few times over.

And finally, because no story about preschoolers in complete without reference to poop and/or boogers: microttes.  This one is a portmanteau, or a word coined by blending two words, such as breakfast + lunch = brunch.   A child from a trilingual French-Spanish-English house apparently regularly invented her own words and one day came up with microttes as a combination of microbes (germs) and crottes (boogers/little poops).  Great! And gross, so let’s go wash our hands, shall we?

Are you curious about the age at which children typically acquire grammatical morphemes?  Although we have a pretty clear picture of the sequence of development of early grammar, the age of acquisition varies a lot from child to child.  This chart can give a general idea, though a word of caution: age estimates are based on observations of a rather small number of children.

Grammatical morpheme Examples Common age of acquisition
Present progressive ing

Prepositions on, in

Regular plural

Eating.

On the table.  In the car.

Dogs, cats

27-30 months
Irregular past tense

Possessive ‘s

Uncontractible copula

It fell.

Mommy’s coffee

Is it here? It is!

31-34 months
Articles a, the

Regular past tense

3rd person singular -s

A flower.  The car.

I licked my ice cream.

He likes pizza.

35-40 months
3rd person of have, do

Forms of the verb be

He has a dog.  She does yoga.

He is climbing. I’m not sliding, but she isAre you hungry?

41-46 months+
From: Bowen, C. (1998). Brown’s Stages of Syntactic and Morphological Development. Retrieved from http://www.speech-language-therapy.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=33 on September 24, 2020.

This post has been about children’s development of spoken grammar.  Some children need extra help with this, but, as previously mentioned, children learn spoken language mostly by simply talking with others.  Little kids don’t need to worry about understanding how grammar works in spoken language, because they unconsciously learn the rules.  However, we know that learning written language is not the same process.  In order to efficiently acquire literacy skills, school-aged children benefit from explicit teaching of many aspects grammar.  For example, many young children will write stopped as stopt and hugged as hugd.  When we teach kids that the letters ed at the end of a word represent the regular past tense, we are teaching morphological awareness. This helps developing readers decode, understand, and spell complex words such as impossible, cooperation, mismanagement, unfathomable. But morphological awareness is a huge topic for another day. Willn’t you stay tuned??