Using
Decodable Text
Decodable text is simply text
matched
to the correspondence knowledge of readers. The words in
decodable
text (except for a limited number of high frequency function words) are
restricted to spelling patterns that the reader can decode given his or
her existing correspondence knowledge. This means that a crucial
factor in determining the decodability of text is the reader’s current
knowledge of correspondences. Even so simple a text as A Cat
Nap
(Educational Insights) is not decodable for prealphabetic
children.
A text featuring long a patterns, such as Jane and Babe
(Educational
Insights), is not decodable for children who have only worked with
short
vowels. On the other hand, Frog and Toad Are Friends
(Lobel,
1970) is decodable for children who have worked with the major vowel
digraphs
and who have acquired enough sight vocabulary to read at a first-grade
instructional level. For skilled readers like ourselves,
virtually
any English text is decodable.
The question about decodable text,
then, is whether or not we should give children texts matched to their
correspondence knowledge. If children have no available
correspondences,
no text is decodable for them. They do have the alternative of
predictable
texts, which are fun to read and excellent instructional texts for
teaching
print concepts and meaning vocabulary. Shared reading (i.e., cued
recitation) with predictable texts may provide opportunities to teach
common
function words by rote, supplying necessary words for reading any
text.
However, cued recitation does not provide the spelling analysis of
decoding,
and therefore we cannot expect children to learn the identities of the
words in predictable texts.
For children who have learned some
correspondences, restricting the vocabulary of texts to words they can
decode has great benefits. With decodable texts, the strategy of
identifying words by sounding out and blending works better than
available
alternatives (guessing from phonetic cues, text memorization, using
illustrations,
memorizing spellings by rote, etc.). Because decoding works,
children
will rely on a decoding strategy. Decoding makes learning sight
words
roughly nine times easier than rote memorization; children can learn
about
nine sight words by decoding with the same effort it takes to learn a
single
word by rote (Gates, 1931; Reitsma, 1983).
Juel and Roper/Schneider (1985)
provided
some evidence that using decodable text induces a decoding
strategy.
They found that children who had only been taught short-vowel
correspondences
but who had worked in decodable text were able to use long-vowel
correspondences
in decoding unfamiliar words. Juel and Roper/Schneider surmised
that
the type of words in texts may be as powerful as the method of
instruction.
Phonics without decodable text is isolated--it works only with words,
not
with stories. If phonics works to decode text, phonics is
integrated.
Beginning readers appreciate and remember correspondences because they
work in constructing the meaning of texts; e.g., when they learn the oa
correspondence, they can read the next story, "The Boat Made of
Soap."
This in turn motivates the extensive and difficult work of phonics.
Teachers are also willing to invest
more effort in explicit phonics instruction when learning a new
correspondence
enables children to read stories successfully. Their children’s
success
motivates their teaching efforts. Well-crafted phonics
instruction
provides children with the tools they need to identify the words and
construct
the meaning of stories, but only if children read carefully matched
decodable
texts.
NEW: Learn about the Reading Genie decodable books for beginning readers--and read a sample book online.
Decodable Text Sources
Phonics Readers (Genie's favorite)
Educational Insights
16941 Keegan Ave, Carson CA 90746
(800) 995-4436
High Noon Books (Best
source for decodable chapter books)
http://www.highnoonbooks.com/
20 Commercial Blvd, Novato CA 94949-6191
(800) 422-7249
Bob Books
Scholastic, Inc.
Available at most major bookstores
Books to Remember
Flyleaf
Publishing
Co.
P.O. Box 185, Lyme NH 03768
(603) 795-2875
J and J Readers
Language!
Sopris West
Educational Services
4185 Salazar Way, Frederick, CO 80504
(800) 547-6747
Reading Sparkers
Children's Research and Development Co.
216 9th Ave, Haddon Heights NJ 08037
(609) 546-9896
Phonics Readers (another Genie favorite)
Steck-Vaughn
(a Harcourt company)
(800) 531-5015
The Wright Skills Decodable Books
The Wright Group
19201 120th Ave NE, Bothell WA 98011
(800) 523-2371
Margaret Hillert Books
Phonics Practice Readers
Modern
Curriculum Press
P.O. Box 2649, Columbus OH 43216
(800) 876-5507
Open Court
Reading Mastery
SRA, a division
of McGraw-Hill
220 E Danieldale Rd, DeSoto TX 75115-2490
(888) SRA-4543
Readers at
Work
P.O. Box 738
Ridgway CO 81432
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