Step 2: Sound-Symbol

 

"My biggest accomplishment - the one I'm most proud of as a student - was graduating from Literacy class and no longer needing an IEP."


~9th grade Structured Literacy Class graduate


Step 2: Sound-Symbol Instructional Routines

In a 50 minute lesson, we spend about 1-2 minutes on sound/symbol knowledge.

But what a mighty minute it can be. Plan ahead, establish routines, and move along.

And of course - the remainder of the lesson is spent engaging with sound/symbol knowledge. We refer back to this "minute" throughout a lesson.

We invite older students in to break the ice. Nothing grabs attention or inspires like a state-champion college-bound athlete and graduate of Structured Literacy Class telling you to "trust your teacher because it works." Literally - nothing.

We follow the Wilson Reading System (Wilson, 2018) scope and sequence:

Pictures and Results From Our Classroom

With students who just could NOT remember the key words or sounds. Play-do. Voila.

Student leaders mix it up. We watch the clock and keep things moving briskly.

Please let me be even faster this time ...

... a student timing himself in sound/symbol knowledge (for fun?).

Paired students review with each other. This will take more than a minute.

All struggling readers deserve to be taught the foundations of written language.

Including what sounds the letters represent. These 2021-22 scores are from the Word Identification and Spelling Test (WIST) (Wilson & Felton, 2004).