inFormaTion TEChnology updaTEd
2025 QuEsTions WiTh ComplETE
soluTions
1. Self-Correction - ANSWER Children begin to correct some of their
own reading errors. Generally, this behavior is accompanied by the
rereading of the previous phrase or sentence.
2. Semantic Cues - ANSWER Children use their prior knowledge, sense
of the story, and pictures to support their predicting and confirming
the meaning of the text.
3. Semantic Web - ANSWER A visual graphic organizer that the teacher
can use to introduce a reading on a specific topic. It visually
represents many other words associated with a target word. The web
can help activate the children's prior knowledge and extend or clarify
it. It can also serve to check new learning after guided or independent
reading.
4. Spatial Learning - ANSWER Using images, color, or layout to help
readers of this learning style.
,5. Stahl, Stephen A - ANSWER Nationally known researcher in the
areas of beginning reading, phonics, fluency, and vocabulary
instruction.
6. Standard Score - ANSWER How far a child's grade on a standardized
test is from the average score (mean) on the test in terms of the
standard deviation. If a child scores 70 on a standardized test and the
standard deviation is 5 and the average (mean) score is 65, the child is
one standard deviation above the average.
7. Standardized Test - ANSWER A test given under specified conditions
allowing comparisons to be made. A set of norms or average scores
on this test will be used for comparisons.
8. Stop-and-Think Strategy - ANSWER A balanced-literacy strategy for
constructing meaning. As the text is being read, the child asks himself
or herself, does this make sense to me? If it does not make sense to
me, I should then try to reread it or read ahead. I can also look up
words that I don't know or ask for help.
9. Strategic Readers - ANSWER As defined by researchers Marie Clay
and Sharon Taberski, _________ readers are self-improving and do
the following as they read: • Monitor their reading to see if it makes
sense semantically, syntactically, and visually. • Look for and use
semantic, syntactic, and visual clues. • Uncover and identify new
things about the text. • Cross check and use one cueing system against
, another. • Self-correct their reading when what they first read does not
match the semantic, syntactic, and visual clues • Solve for and
identify new words using multiple cueing systems.
10. Structural Analysis - ANSWER The process of examining the
words in the text for meaningful word units (affixes, base words,
inflected endings).
11. Syntactic Cues - ANSWER When you ask a child, if what he or
she has just read "sounds right" to him or her, you are trying to get
that child to use. These cues use the order of words and the student's
knowledge of the oral English language to help determine if what was
read could be accurate.
12. Taberski, Sharon - ANSWER Elementary teacher and researcher.
Work focuses on a series of interconnected interactions with the
learner rather than on a prescribed set of skills. The interactions
include: assessment, demonstration, practice, and response.
13. Text Features - ANSWER Children need to be alerted to the
following ____ ________ that may initially appear strange to them: 1.
a period that marks the end of a "telling sentence" 2. a question mark
that is at the end of a sentence that asks a question 3. an exclamation
mark used to express surprise or excitement at the end of a sentence
4. capital letters that begin a sentence and the names of persons,
places, and things 5. bold, italicized, or underlined text to highlight
, key ideas 6. quotation marks that show dialogue 7. a hyphen used to
break a long word up into its syllables 8. a dash used to show a break
in an idea, a parenthetical element, or an omission an ellipse that
shows an omission or break in the text 9. a paragraph in nonfiction
which shows a new point being made.
14. Trade Books - ANSWER Books designed to entertain and inform
outside the classroom which can be used successfully in the
classroom to heighten motivation in your students. While textbooks
cover a topic in a prescribed way, these may introduce or expand
upon a topic by including it in a fictional setting, or alternatively, a
non-fiction account from real life.
15. Transactionalism - ANSWER Borrows from cognitivism and
constructivism. View of the reading transaction as a unique event
involving reader and text at a particular time under particular
circumstances rules out the dualistic emphasis of other theories on
either the reader or the text as separate and static entities. This
concept accounts for the importance of factors such as gender,
ethnicity, culture, and socioeconomic context. Louise Rosenblatt.
16. Transitional Readers - ANSWER Recognize an increasing number
of "hard" words that are content related. They can provide summaries
of the stories they read. They are more at ease with handling longer,
more complex, connected text with short chapters. These readers can
read independent-level texts with correct phrasing, expression, and
fluency. When they encounter unfamiliar words, they have a variety