Action Research
Action Research
Action Research
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The Question:
When the kindergarten teacher of Trace Crossings Elementary School knew that they
were going to have Samford students conducting action research in their classrooms, they
gathered together and decided on the biggest need that they had with their kindergarten students.
They decided that the biggest need that they had was letter recognition. The question that I was
attempting to answer is: What are the most effective strategies for teaching letter recognition?
Letter recognition is an important step towards reading. In the case of my students, they were in
a classroom where some students were reading beginner chapter books such as Henry and
Mudge. Although the students understand that different people learn at different speeds, it is to
be frustrating to be behind the other students. The ability to identify letters is the first step
towards the students being able to read and not feeling as though they are behind in school.
Timeline:
Sessions:
Session 1
Session 2
Session 3
Session 4
Session 5
Session 6
Session 7
Plan:
Garfield Assessment
Play letter recognition board game
Initial Letter Recognition Assessment
Play letter recognition board game
Work with letters
Say letter names and sounds
Work with letters
Say letter names and sounds
Midpoint Assessment
Play letter recognition board game
Fill in alphabet with uppercase letters
Find letters in environment
Have the students tell sentences
Have the students circle letters within sentences
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Session 8
3
Final Assessment
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correctly identified 44 out of the 52 letters. Student CR correctly identified 50 out of the 52
letters. Student CL correctly identified 51 out of the 52 letters. These students knew most of their
letters.
With the data I had gathered from the interest survey and the letter recognition
assessment and keeping the packet of strategies that my teacher handed me in mind, I put
together a plan. I liked several of the strategies that my teacher provided me with. I planned on
using those for the first session to see how the students responded to them and see if I needed to
find different ones for my students to learn better.
Log of Sessions:
Date:
10-9-14
What We Did:
Garfield Interest Survey
10-16-14
10-20-14
10-22-14
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Letter Names, and Saying
Letter Sounds
10-23-14
Midpoint Assessment
10-30-14
11-6-14
12-4-14
Final Assessment
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quickly. Student CR did the letters in order,
while Student CL did the letters out of order.
Student A started off slowly and did the letters in
order. Each student did well telling me the letter
names and sounds.
The students did well on the midpoint
assessment. Student A improved the most from
the initial assessment. She knew five more
letters than she did at the initial assessment.
Students CR and CL showed no improvement
from the initial assessment, but after reviewing
the data I discovered that they both missed
different letters in the midpoint assessment than
they had in their initial assessment.
The students responded well to filling in the mat
with the uppercase letters. This mat was the one
that only provided four letters and the students
must fill in the rest of the alphabet. When the
students had the mat filled in, I had them touch
the letters and say their names. Each student had
at least one letter out of place but they selfcorrected when they actually had to slow down
and look at the letters to say their names.
The students really liked telling me a sentence
about themselves. They also responded well to
finding the letters that I assigned them to find
within the sentences. Student A needed more
time to look for her letters and she needed a few
clues to narrow where she was looking. Student
CL did a good job finding all of her letters.
Student CR had trouble looking for both
uppercase and lowercase letters. All of the
students needed reminding of what their letters
looked like before they started looking.
Student CL withdrew before this assessment.
Student CR improved on this assessment with
one more letter than he knew for the midpoint
assessment. Student A remained the same. In
both students, they missed letters that they knew
on the midpoint and initial assessment.
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Strategies Used:
One of the first strategies that I used was using an alphabet mat and having the students
match plastic letters to the corresponding letter on the mat. They did this with uppercase letters
for a while and then we moved onto lowercase letters. Each time the finished, I had them touch
the letters and sing the alphabet. If they had a letter that was in the wrong spot, they realized it
when we sang the alphabet and self-corrected.
The next strategy that we used was similar to the first. It was an alphabet mat that they
had to fill in themselves. There were only four letter provided (A, M, N, and Z) and the students
were to fill in the remaining alphabet. We only used uppercase letters on this mat.
In addition to the two alphabet mat strategies, we looked for letters that were relevant to
the students. We made connections about how Student CL and Student CR both had names that
started with a C but Student A was the only one in the group whose name started with an A.
I also had the students tell me sentences about what they did during the week, I would write them
on a piece of paper, and they would have to find certain letters.
Assessments Used:
I used several different letter recognition assessments. They were all similar in the fact
that they had the alphabet scrambled in uppercase letters and the alphabet scrambled in
lowercase letters. Some of the assessments would also include parts for letter writing in them. I
omitted those sections because we were working on letter recognition instead of letter writing.
The students could either tell me the letter name or skip the letter if they did not know it. I
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attached one of the assessments to this document. Every other assessment was similar to this one,
but the letters were always in a different order.
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letters scrambled they did not do very well. They needed more practice with identifying letters
out of order.
CL
Final Assessment
CR
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question would be hard to determine without spending the amount of time with the students that I
did. One way that I could have helped this issue would be to work with individual letters of the
alphabet instead of focusing on the alphabet as a whole.
Overall, I feel like I learned a lot over the course of this project. I wish that I could have a
progress monitoring chart to show my growth like the students. I feel like I am coming away
from this project with more thoughts of what I should have done or what I should have changed
than thoughts of being happy at what I did. I have to remind myself that this was a learning
process and that it is good that I do not think that I was perfect. There is always room to improve
especially when learning or doing something for the first time.
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response
response
Key
4
correctly
recognized
WR
wrong response
DK
didnt know
NR
no response
4 total # recognized:
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Abstract
The topic of this paper is the most effective strategies for teaching letter recognition to students.
This paper contains the findings of four different scholarly sources to attempt to provide an
answer to the question of the most effective strategies for teaching letter recognition. Some of the
findings include that students learn better when surrounded by their peers. Students also learn
best when they have exposure to the letters that is applicable to them. One way to provide
students exposure to letters is to have them look for certain letters in their neighborhood. Another
effective strategy for teaching letter recognition to students is to expose them to the letters in
several different ways instead of the traditional flash card and alphabet line method.
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The ability to read is something that most people take for granted. The most basic
element of reading is letter recognition. When learning to read, letter recognition is the first piece
of the puzzle that allows children access into the world of print. The importance of letter
recognition has led to many questions about the best practices of teaching letter recognition.
The book Teaching Children to Read: The Teacher Makes the Difference (n.d.) discusses
a variety of ways to teach letter recognition to students. The book mentioned that flash cards and
an alphabet chart above the board are insufficient in teaching students letter recognition. For
students to recognize their letters accurately and quickly, they need a combination of practice
with the flash cards and alphabet chart, identifying letters in texts, and writing the letters. The
combination of all three practices yields the best results for teaching letter recognition.
A fun alternative to the boring flash card and alphabet chart duo is to make a version of
alphabet Go Fish. This allows the students to learn through playing. They are exposed to the
letters of the alphabet in a random order and are constantly being exposed to the letters over and
over again. If twenty-six letters are too many for students to recognize, then the deck of cards
can be cut down to only the letters that the teacher wants the students to work with. An engaging
way to search for letters in text would be to post a small paragraph on chart paper, whiteboard, or
promethean board and have the students play a version of I Spy. Tell a student to find all of the
ms in the paragraph. For the advanced students, set a timer and play the game against the
timer. A quick and easy way to write letters is to give each student a white board and give them
ten seconds to write a letter. For the next letter give them nine seconds, and so on. At the end of
the game have the students hold up their boards and see how they are doing. (Reutzel, n.d.)
In their report Piasta and Wagner (2010) explain that research has shown that students
learn the alphabet better in school rather than at home and in small groups better than individual
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tutoring. I feel as though this is due to the fact that children are social beings and they learn best
from their peers. The report goes on to discuss how a students future spelling abilities are best
predicted by their knowledge of letter names and sounds. The knowledge of letter names and
sounds also goes on to predict a students ability to learn to read. If they have trouble with the
letter names and sounds, then they will have trouble recognizing sight words and decoding
unknown words when they come across them. (Piasta, 2010)
Rita Newman (1996) discusses how having students look for letters and sight words in
their own environments helps the students remember and recognize the letter or the word faster.
If a student were to see an A on their street sign, they would see it every time they passed and
they would have the consistent reinforcement of the letter. Newman (1996) suggests a book
called City Seen from A to Z which walks through a city using the alphabet. This would be a
good book to use to introduce the students to the idea of looking for letters or even sight words
wherever they go. (Newman, 1996)
The article written by John Shefelbine (1998) discusses the importance of not only
teaching the letters, but also the phonics that accompany the letters. The definition provided for
phonics is the relationship between sounds in speech (phonological patterns) and spelling
patterns (orthographic patterns) (Shefelbine, 1998). Phonics is not merely the letter sounds, it is
the relationship between the letters and the text and how they blend together. This can be hard
for ELL students especially to master. They can know the individual letter sounds, but when
some letters are placed next to each other, they can create an entirely different sound than either
of the letters by themselves would make. A students knowledge of phonics is helpful when they
are learning how to spell, even in kindergarten. They will spell through sounding out words and
they need a basic understanding of phonics to help them spell. According to research, the best
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way to teach phonics is through frequent and short teacher led lessons, introducing the alphabet
and consonant blends a little at a time and reviewing them as time goes on, and relate the phonics
that the students are working with to other parts of the curriculum such as spelling, reading, or
vocabulary. (Shefelbine, 1998)
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References