Word-Attack Strategies
Word-attack strategies help students decode, pronounce, and understand unfamiliar words. They help students attack words piece by piece or from a different angle. Model and instruct students:
If you come to a word you don’t know you should.............
Use Picture Clues
· Look at the picture.
· Are there people, objects, or actions in the picture that might make sense in the sentence?
Frame It “Frame it”
· Use two fingers to surround the word like a picture frame
Sound Out the Word
· Start with the first letter, and say each letter-sound out loud.
· Blend the sounds together and try to say the word. Does the word make sense in the sentence?
Look for Chunks in the Word “Chunk It”
· Look for familiar letter chunks. They may be sound/symbols, prefixes, suffixes, endings, whole words, or base words.
· Read each chunk by itself. Then blend the chunks together and sound out the word. Does that word make sense in the sentence?
Connect to a Word You Know
· Think of a word that looks like the unfamiliar word. “Does it look or sound like a word you know?”
· Compare the familiar word to the unfamiliar word. Decide if the familiar word is a chunk or form of the unfamiliar word.
· Use the known word in the sentence to see if it makes sense. If so, the meanings of the two words are close enough for understanding.
Reread the Sentence “Read again”
· Read the sentence more than once.
· Think about what word might make sense in the sentence. Try the word and see if the sentence makes sense.
Keep Reading
· Read past the unfamiliar word and look for clues.
· If the word is repeated, compare the second sentence to the first. “What word might make sense in both?”
Use Prior Knowledge
· Think about what you know about the subject of the book, paragraph, or sentence.
· Do you know anything that might make sense in the sentence? Read the sentence with the word to see if it makes sense.
Word-attack strategies help students decode, pronounce, and understand unfamiliar words. They help students attack words piece by piece or from a different angle. Model and instruct students:
If you come to a word you don’t know you should.............
Use Picture Clues
· Look at the picture.
· Are there people, objects, or actions in the picture that might make sense in the sentence?
Frame It “Frame it”
· Use two fingers to surround the word like a picture frame
Sound Out the Word
· Start with the first letter, and say each letter-sound out loud.
· Blend the sounds together and try to say the word. Does the word make sense in the sentence?
Look for Chunks in the Word “Chunk It”
· Look for familiar letter chunks. They may be sound/symbols, prefixes, suffixes, endings, whole words, or base words.
· Read each chunk by itself. Then blend the chunks together and sound out the word. Does that word make sense in the sentence?
Connect to a Word You Know
· Think of a word that looks like the unfamiliar word. “Does it look or sound like a word you know?”
· Compare the familiar word to the unfamiliar word. Decide if the familiar word is a chunk or form of the unfamiliar word.
· Use the known word in the sentence to see if it makes sense. If so, the meanings of the two words are close enough for understanding.
Reread the Sentence “Read again”
· Read the sentence more than once.
· Think about what word might make sense in the sentence. Try the word and see if the sentence makes sense.
Keep Reading
· Read past the unfamiliar word and look for clues.
· If the word is repeated, compare the second sentence to the first. “What word might make sense in both?”
Use Prior Knowledge
· Think about what you know about the subject of the book, paragraph, or sentence.
· Do you know anything that might make sense in the sentence? Read the sentence with the word to see if it makes sense.