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Module 3: Phonemic Awareness

Authored by Jim Addison

English

Professional Development

CCSS covered

Used 2+ times

Module 3: Phonemic Awareness
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14 questions

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1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Which of the following students is demonstrating the specific type of phonological awareness known as phonemic awareness?

A student who, after being shown a letter of the alphabet, can orally identify its corresponding sounds

A student who listens to the words sing, ring, fling, and hang and can identify that hang is different

A student who, after hearing the word hat, can orally identify that it ends with the sound /t/

A student who listens to the word magazine and can determine that it contains three syllables

Tags

CCSS.RF.4.3A

CCSS.RF.5.3A

CCSS.L.1.2D

CCSS.RF.2.3E

CCSS.L.K.2C

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

A kindergarten teacher could best determine if a child has begun to develop phonemic awareness by asking the child do:

count the number of words that the child hears in a sentence as the teachers says the sentence

say the word cat, then say the first sound the child hears in the word

Point to the correct letter on an alphabet chart as the teacher names specific letters

listen to the teacher say boat and coat, then identify whether the two words rhyme

Tags

CCSS.RF.4.3A

CCSS.RF.5.3A

CCSS.L.1.2D

CCSS.RF.2.3E

CCSS.L.K.2C

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

As students begin to read, the ability to blend phonemes orally contributes to their reading development primarily because it helps students:

recognize and understand sight words in a text

use knowledge of letter-sound correspondence to decode words

guess the meaning of unfamiliar words from their context

divide written words into onsets and rimes

Tags

CCSS.RF.4.3A

CCSS.RF.5.3A

CCSS.L.1.2D

CCSS.RF.2.3E

CCSS.RF.K.3D

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

A teacher holds up a series of familiar objects, asking students to name each object and isolate the final sound they hear. This type of activity would be most appropriate for a student who:

needs help developing phonemic segmentation skills

is performing below grade-level benchmarks in reading fluency

lacks automaticity in word recognition

has difficulty sounding out phonetically regular one-syllable words

Tags

CCSS.RF.1.2A

CCSS.RF.1.2B

CCSS.RF.1.2C

CCSS.RF.1.2D

CCSS.RF.K.2D

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Phonemic awareness contributes most to the development of phonics skills in beginning reading by helping them:

recognize different ways in which one sound ca be represented in print

count the number of syllables in a written word

Identify in spoken language separate sounds that can be mapped to letters

understand the concept of a silent letter

Tags

CCSS.RF.4.3A

CCSS.RF.5.3A

CCSS.L.1.2D

CCSS.RF.2.3E

CCSS.L.K.2C

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

Which of the following first-grade students has attained the HIGHEST level of phonemic awareness

A student who, after hearing the word hot and the sound /i/ can substitute /i/ for /o/ to make the word hit.

A student who can orally segment the word wonderful into won-der-ful

A student who, after hearing the words fish and fun, can identify that they both begin with the same phoneme /f/

A student who orally segments the word train on its onset and rime

Tags

CCSS.RF.4.3A

CCSS.RF.5.3A

CCSS.L.1.2D

CCSS.RF.2.3E

CCSS.RF.K.3A

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

2 mins • 1 pt

A K teacher asks a small group of students to repeat her. First, she says the word grape and then pronounces it as gr and ape. Next she says the word take and pronounces it as t and ake. This activity is likely to promote the students' phonemic awareness primarily by..

helping them recognize distinct syllables in oral language

encouraging them to divide words onto onsets and rimes

teaching them how to distinguish between consonants and vowels

promoting their awareness of letter-sound correspondence

Tags

CCSS.RF.4.3A

CCSS.RF.5.3A

CCSS.RF.1.3D

CCSS.RF.2.3C

CCSS.RF.3.3C

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