Sunday, April 24, 2011

Mini-Lesson Blog

Mini-Lesson 1

I have been working in Mrs. Beasley’s kindergarten class since late September 2010. For this mini-lesson I decided to work with a student one-on-one who struggles in many subjects, but I worked with him specifically on sound letter recognition. I have worked with Tristan many times throughout the semester because he is behind the other students in class in all subjects, including reading, writing, and mathematics. Tristan is still having trouble writing his name because he can’t remember what sound goes with what letter. He also struggles with identifying his letters, which may be one of the main reasons why he cannot remember which sounds go with what letters. I decided for this mini lesson I would only focus on the letters that are in his name, since I only had two weeks to work with him. The first week I worked with Tristan for 30 minutes out in the hallway. I started the mini-lesson by asking Tristan if he could use the letter blocks to spell out his name. I only gave Tristan the block letters that he would need to spell out his name. With the letters he spelled out Tisartn. I asked him why he spelled out his name like this and he said because he didn’t really know how to spell his name. For the next 15 minutes we worked on identifying the letters and their sounds. I would hold up the letters in the order that they appeared and asked him to identify the letter and what sound it made. For example, when I held up t he would say that is a t and makes the sound ttt. When I thought he had mastered this skill I set up the letter blocks in order, like this Tristan. I then had him study it and then I scrambled up the letters and had him put the letters back together. As he was moving the letters I had him say what letter it was and then what sound it made. He was able to identify T, i, and r consistently. With some scaffolding he was able to arrange the letters in the correct order. The next week I went back out into the hallway to see if Tristan had retained any information from the week before. For the first activity I asked him to identify the letters and what sound they made. He again, like the week before, was able to identify T, I, and r consistently. I then arranged his name and scrambled up the letters. When I asked him to rearrange the letters he was unable to do so. I think Tristan struggles so much with spelling his name because he cannot recall the letters or their sounds. I have also noticed from working with Tristan a lot of the semester that he has trouble retaining information. This can be seen even throughout this mini-lesson because he did not retain a lot of the information he learned in week 1 into week 2. Overall, I think Tristan needs to work on identifying the letters and retaining information in order for him to be able to identify his letters and what sounds they make.

Mini-Lesson 2

For my second mini-lesson I worked with Larry, who is a low to middle achieving student in my class. Larry sometimes struggles with identifying what letter an object begins with. For example, if I showed him a book he may struggle identifying that book starts with b. I wanted to work with Larry on looking at an object and identifying their beginning sound and what letter that is. For this mini-lesson I used a game that my coordinating teacher had in her classroom that I thought would be affective for teaching letter-sound awareness. This game was set up much like a candy land board game, except it had the letters w, x, y, and z scattered throughout the board. Each player chose a card and had to identify the object and what letter they started with. For example, if I chose a zoo and I identified that zoo started with z then I would move to the closest z spot on the board. Before we started the game I had Larry identify the letters that were on the board. Larry had a hard time identifying x and y, but identified w and z with no problem. We played the game and Larry was able to identify all of the objects on the card without any problem. He struggled, however, to identify what letter the object started with. I helped Larry by emphasizing the first sound of every word. By the end of the game Larry was better identifying what letter the objects started with.

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