
Programs & Projects
The Institute is a catalyst for advancing a comprehensive national literacy agenda.
[PovertyRaceWomen 140] Re: dialect
Andrea Wilder
andreawilder at comcast.netMon Dec 25 19:18:28 EST 2006
- Previous message: [PovertyRaceWomen 138] Re: dialect
- Next message: [PovertyRaceWomen 137] Re: dialect
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Yes, correct the way the students read the words. Standard English is
our lingua franca, and everyone should master it. This would also
make for an interesting class discussion. I have a number of friends
who code switch.
Andrea
On Dec 24, 2006, at 10:31 AM, Daphne Greenberg wrote:
> I was recently asked a question from an adult literacy teacher and I
> wondered what folks on this listserv think. She teaches basic decoding
> skills to adults who read at about the 3rd grade level. In addition to
> a
> language experience approach, she also spends quite a bit of time
> systematically teaching them how to sound out words. Many of her
> African
> American students, when reading and sounding out words, read certain
> words, the way they speak them. So for example, they read "ask" as
> "aks"
> and "strawberry" as "skrawberry". Since a portion of her class is
> focused on teaching letter-sound correspondences and applying it to
> decoding new and unknown words should she be concerned about the way
> they read those words? She says that during nondecoding time, she is
> not
> concerned, because their dialect is their dialect and is just as
> acceptable as standard english. However, she wondered if she is
> teaching
> decoding from a standard english point of view, should she be
> correcting
> the way they read those words?
> What do people think?
> Daphne
> ----------------------------------------------------
> National Institute for Literacy
> Poverty, Race, Women and Literacy mailing list
> PovertyRaceWomen at nifl.gov
> To unsubscribe or change your subscription settings, please go to
> http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/povertyracewomen
>
- Previous message: [PovertyRaceWomen 138] Re: dialect
- Next message: [PovertyRaceWomen 137] Re: dialect
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Diversity discussion list



