Thursday, August 28, 2008

Hudson's, Chapter 3

Salam and Selamat Sejahtera Students,

Please read Hudson, Chapter 3, Second and foreign language reading issues, for Tuesday's class.

Thank you



Wednesday, August 27, 2008

MICRO-TEACHING SCHEDULE - U5D

Monday, October 6, 2008, 6 - 8.pm


1.Nur Hani Laily
2.Mohd Ateff
3.Muhammad Azwan
4.Huzaifah hamid
5.Siti Nor Aisyah
6.Napisah Abd Wahab
7.Nur Khairiah
8.Norhaslinda Mohd

Wednesday October 8, 10.30 - 11.30 am

1.Nurul Haziqah
2.Adleen Najihah
3.Amar Syahrul

Monday, October 13, 6 - 8 pm.

1.Najwa Hanani
2.Anis Shazwani
3.Hazwan Hamdan
4.Mohd Sukrillah
5.Mafarhanatul Akmal
6.Nur Syarafina
7.Nursyuhada Zakaria
8.Ahmad Irwan


Wednesday, October 15, 10.30 - 11.30 am
1.Noor Hanna
2.Nururl Hazianti
3.Nur Aimi Jamshah


Monday, October 20, 6 - 8pm.
1.Fuzirah Hanim
2.Siti Ainul Ayzan
3.Nur Zakiah
4.Liyana Ahmad Afip
5.Hartini Ibrahim
6.Muhammad Asyraf
7.Ahmad Hafizuddin
8.Hafizah Shazwani


Wednesday, October 22, 10.30 - 11.30 am
1.Nurul Aainaa
2.Anur NAimi
3. Saidatul Izdihar


Saturday, August 9, 2008

Reading Skills Lecture

For the benefit of those who would like to copy the notes for this lecture I have posted them as an entry. Here:

READING SKILLS : Definition


Describe roughly as a cognitive ability which a person is able to use when interacting with written texts.
Seen as a part of the generalized reading process
Reading skills have been used to structure reading syllabi and for test construction.


SEPARIBILITY OF SKILLS

In general reading skills are presented in categories or taxonomies:
Word attack skills
Comprehension skills
Fluency skills
Critical reading skills


Word attack skills (aka decoding skills)
Skills necessary to convert orthographic symbols into language
Requires readers to recognize that the script represents units of language, e.g. phonemes, syllable and words
Sub-skills include, recognizing syllable pattern, converting strings to sound, recognizing word boundaries

Comprehension skills
Represent the ability use context and knowledge to derive meaning from text
Examples:
Grammatical skills, knowledge of syntax, mechanics,
Using context to gain meaning, using schemata as aids
Using metacognitive knowledge
Recognizing text structure
Predicting what will come next in text

Fluency skills
Skills that allow a reader to see larger sentences and phrases as wholes
–A process that aids in reading more quickly
◦Examples:
–Sight word recognition and recognizing high-frequency letter cluster
–Rapid reading
–Possessing extensive vocabulary


COMPREHENSION SKILLS

}Reading skills have been a major area of reading research over recent years (Urquhart & Weir, 1998)
}As such there is a great variety of the specific skills identified by various teachers and researchers
}Rosenshine (1980) examined the comprehension skills identified by five authoritative educational sources

}The examination revealed 3 general types of skills associated with comprehension
◦Locating details
–Simplest skills – recognition, paraphrase, matching
◦Simple inferential skills
–Understanding words in context, recognizing sequence of events, recognizing cause-effect relationship
◦Complex inferential skills
–Recognizing main idea, drawing conclusions, predicting outcomes
}Rosenshine discovered 7 sub-skills across the 3 general reading skills
◦Recognizing sequence
◦Recognizing words in context
◦Identifying the main ideas
◦Decoding detail
◦Drawing inferences
◦Recognizing cause and effect
◦Comparing and contrast
}Analysis of all college reading textbooks for L2 learners will show the inclusion of all the above skills.

HIERARCHY OF SKILLS


}Reading skills fall into a continuum of hierarchies
}In many models of skill, focus of attention may change from lower-level skills to higher level skills as reading ability is acquired
}The lower level skills involving visual perception and phonic analysis become automatic with practice and require less conscious monitoring
}Many educators and researchers have identified reading skills at different levels of details
}Clymer (1968) presented a taxonomy, developed by Barret (N.D), which is divided into 5 ordered skill levels:
a)Literal comprehension
b)Reorganization
c)Inferential comprehension
d)Evaluation
e)Appreciation


SUMMARY

}Generally, L1 and L2 literature argue against the existence of strictly hierarchically ordered reading skills
}There are broad categories of skills which are mediated by text, purpose and content
}These skills helped in curriculum development and scope and sequence charts associated with textbooks and series
}Nevertheless, these skills are not unitary in their structure
}Thus, it is the teaching of multiple skills would be appropriate

Friday, August 8, 2008

QUIZ 1

Salam and Selamat Sejahtera Students

Quiz 1 will be on Monday, 11th August 2008, 6 - 8 pm.

Topics covered will be from Week 1 until Reading Skills.

Please also check out activities on teaching vocabulary/word attack skills in reading skills books in the library or from the Internet.
Format : Several short answer questions mainly asking you to define, explain and apply.
GOOD LUCK

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Word Attack

Activities to teach suffixes / prefixes (Continuation from slide)



Supply an incomplete table of forms consisting of basewords with various affixes
- Task : Complete the table by filling the gaps

Example:


educate education educable ineducable
_______ variation _______ ________
_______ _______ observable ________
define _______ _______ ________
_______ _______ _______ unpronounceable
_______ _______ recognizable ________


Supply sentences containing words of a particular form e.g. verbs
- Task rewrite the sentences in a specified way entailing the use of a different form of the given word e.g. nouns instead of verbs.

Example:

1. The enemy attacked at dawn

The ______ was completely unexpected.

2. They bombarded the walls with cannons.

The _______ finally gave them the chance to scale the wall at one point.

3. The city was destroyed.

The _________ of the city caused the deaths of 15,000 inhabitants.






Exercise that can be carried out on MS Words


EXERCISE USING DELETE AND INSERTION

For exercises on verb-form/tenses, stem, prefixes and suffixes

Example:
Root word, Prefixes and suffixes

Instructions:


Type the root word port
Copy the root word into memory: double click on the root word to highlight it and press CTRL + C
Place the cursor under each definition Press CTRL + V
Add prefix or suffix to figure out the word

Definition:

1. to send out the country, legal

2. to bring from an external source

3. to send to other country

4. capable of being carried

5. a selection of student’s work

6. to carry from one place to another

7. a person stationed to assist e.g. at the train station

8. to bring back and tell again

Tuesday, August 5, 2008