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Putting Two and Two Together: Middle School Students' Morphological Problem-Solving Strategies For Unknown Words
Putting Two and Two Together: Middle School Students' Morphological Problem-Solving Strategies For Unknown Words
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Putting Two and Two Together: Middle School Students' Morphological Problem-Solving Strategies For Unknown Words
Putting Two and Two Together: Middle School Students' Morphological Problem-Solving Strategies For Unknown Words
Journal Article

Putting Two and Two Together: Middle School Students' Morphological Problem-Solving Strategies For Unknown Words

2013
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Overview
Adolescents often use root word and affix knowledge to figure out unknown words. Anglin (1993) found that younger readers favor the Part-to-Whole strategy, and Tyler and Nagy (1989) confirmed the importance of root-word knowledge for middle school students. This study seeks to understand the different strategies middle school readers use so that teachers can leverage these approaches in future morphological instruction. The authors interviewed 20 seventh- and eighth-grade students from two middle schools in the Southeastern United States. Males and females were represented evenly across sites. They chose these two schools because each served populations of either proficient or struggling readers and could showcase the problem-solving strategies used by these different groups of readers. Study data were collected through 20-minute interviews led by the authors of this article. Students were asked to problem solve 12 morphologically complex words, with follow-up questions about their problem-solving processes. Because they focused on how students might use morphology beyond orthography and phonology, when students mispronounced a word, the interviewer gave them the correct pronunciation. Based on their findings, the authors discuss strategies and make instructional recommendations to support students in determining word meanings. The article concludes that although only part of comprehensive vocabulary instruction, morphological problem-solving strategies can be powerful tools in a student's literacy tool belt. Their analysis suggests students use sophisticated strategies when trying to figure out the meanings of morphologically complex words. (Contains 6 figures and 3 tables.)
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd,Wiley Subscription Services,Wiley-Blackwell
Subject

Accountability

/ Accreditation

/ Accuracy

/ Achievement gap

/ Action research

/ Adolescent/young adult literature

/ Adult

/ Advocacy

/ Affective influences

/ Affixes

/ Aliteracy

/ Analogies

/ Analogy

/ Analytic

/ and materials

/ as inquiry

/ Assessment

/ Assistive technologies

/ At-risk factors

/ Attitude

/ Audience

/ Authentic

/ Author studies

/ Automaticity

/ Awards

/ Behavioral

/ Case study

/ Censorship

/ Childhood

/ Children's literature

/ Choice

/ Classroom management

/ Code switching

/ Cognitive

/ College/university students

/ Community-based programs

/ Comprehension

/ Comprehension monitoring

/ Constructionism

/ Constructivism

/ Content analyses

/ Content literacy

/ Context

/ Context clues

/ Criterion referenced

/ Critical analysis

/ Critical literacy

/ Critical pedagogy

/ Critical theory

/ culture (C1

/ Decoding

/ Depth of (higher level

/ design experiments

/ Developmental

/ Diagnostic

/ Dialects

/ Digital/media literacies

/ Discourse analysis

/ Discussion

/ Discussion strategies

/ Distance education

/ distance learning

/ Domain knowledge

/ Drama

/ Early adolescence

/ Early Adolescents

/ Early childhood

/ Embedded

/ English as a foreign language

/ English as a second language

/ English for speakers of other languages

/ English Language Learners

/ English learners

/ etc

/ Ethnography

/ Evidence-based

/ Expectations

/ Experimental

/ Explicit

/ exposure

/ Expressive language

/ Extrinsic

/ Eye movement

/ Fairy tales

/ Family literacy

/ FEATURE ARTICLE

/ Feminist

/ Fiction

/ Field work

/ First

/ Fluency

/ folk tales

/ Formative experiments

/ Gender issues

/ General vocabulary

/ Genre studies

/ Genres

/ Grade 7

/ Grade 8

/ Graduate education

/ graduate programs

/ Grammar

/ High-frequency words

/ Historical

/ Home language

/ Home language practices

/ Home-school connections

/ Imagery

/ Implicit

/ In-service

/ Induction

/ Informal

/ Information and communication technologies

/ Information literacy

/ Information processing

/ Informational text

/ Instructional intervention

/ Instructional models

/ Instructional technology

/ Interest

/ Intergenerational literacy

/ Internet

/ Interviews

/ Intrinsic

/ Invented spelling

/ Junior High School Students

/ language (L1

/ Language acquisition

/ Language development

/ Language learners

/ Legislation

/ Libraries

/ Linguistic morphology

/ Linguistics

/ Listening

/ Listening strategies

/ Literacy

/ Literacy Education

/ literal level

/ Literary elements

/ Literary theory

/ Literature

/ Literature-based instruction

/ Making inferences

/ mandates

/ Mentoring

/ Metacognition

/ Metacognitive strategies

/ methods

/ Middle School Students

/ Middle schools

/ Miscue analysis

/ Mixed methods

/ Modes

/ Morphemes

/ Morphological Processing

/ Morphology (Languages)

/ Motivation/engagement

/ Multicultural literature

/ Multilingualism

/ music

/ Narrative

/ narrative inquiry

/ Neuropsychological

/ New literacies

/ Nonfiction

/ Ongoing assessment

/ Onsets and rimes

/ Oral language

/ Oral reading

/ Outcomes

/ Parental involvement

/ Persistence

/ phonemic awareness

/ Phonics

/ Phonograms

/ phonological awareness

/ Poetry

/ Policy

/ Policy study

/ Polysyllabic analysis

/ Popular culture

/ Portfolios

/ Postmodernism

/ Poststructuralism

/ Practice

/ Predicting

/ preference

/ Preservice

/ Prior knowledge

/ Problem Solving

/ professional development

/ Professional writing

/ Program evaluation

/ Programs

/ Prosody

/ Protocols

/ Psycholinguistic

/ Purpose

/ Qualitative

/ quasi-experimental

/ Questioning

/ rate

/ read-alouds

/ Reading instruction

/ Reading strategies

/ Receptive language

/ Reflection

/ Remediation

/ Research methodology

/ resources

/ Retelling

/ Reviews

/ Rubrics

/ Schema theory

/ School based

/ Scientific

/ Screening

/ second

/ Second-language learning

/ Second-language reading

/ Selecting

/ Selection criteria

/ Self-assessment

/ self-concept

/ Self-efficacy

/ Self-perception

/ Semantics

/ Semiotics

/ sexual orientation

/ Sight words

/ Sociocognitive

/ Sociocultural

/ Socioeconomic

/ Socioeconomic factors

/ Sociolinguistic

/ Special needs

/ Specialized vocabulary

/ Specific media (hypertext

/ Specific subject areas (math

/ Speed

/ Spelling

/ Standardized

/ Standards-based

/ Strategies

/ Structural analysis

/ Struggling learners

/ Study strategies

/ Style

/ Suffixes

/ Summarizing

/ Supervision

/ Supplementary resources

/ Survey

/ Synthetic

/ Systematic

/ Teacher education

/ teacher research

/ Teaching Methods

/ teaching strategies

/ Text features

/ text structure

/ Text types

/ Textbooks

/ Thematic units

/ Theoretical perspectives

/ To inform instruction

/ To learners in which of the following categories does your work apply?

/ Transactional

/ Transformative

/ Tutoring

/ United States (Southeast)

/ Useage

/ Visual literacy

/ visualizing

/ Vocabulary

/ Vocabulary Development

/ Vygotskian

/ wide reading

/ word recognition

/ Word structure

/ Words

/ Writer's workshop

/ Writing

/ Writing across the curriculum

/ Writing process

/ Writing strategies

/ Writing to learn

/ X Adolescence

/ X Cognates

/ X English language learners

/ X Instructional strategies

/ X Learning strategies

/ X Morphemic analysis

/ X Morphology