Spelling Sites
I tend not to focus much on spelling when I write about the teaching of writing. However, I’m well-aware that using conventions properly is extremely important.
Each week, my students have eight personal words, which are drawn from their own writing and/or high-frequency words they misspell on assessments I give. [These are in addition to the vocabulary words that come from our Interactive Read Alouds and the word patterns we focus on each week. (My colleagues and I use Wilde’s Book for our spelling curriculum.)] I just finished putting together my students’ personal word lists for the upcoming week.
Thanks to a couple of websites, I was able to come up with additional words for patterns I’ve noticed some of my kids having a weakness with (e.g., ea-, -ought, and -ly patterns). The super-fabulous sites you need to check-out, if you’re doing any type of word work with your students, are:
Finally, a great children’s dictionary I use, but didn’t use this evening, can be found at Wordsmyth.net.
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Stacey Shubitz View All
I am a literacy consultant who has spent the past dozen years working with teachers to improve the teaching of writing in their classrooms. While I work with teachers and students in grades K-6, I'm a former fourth and fifth-grade teacher so I have a passion for working with upper elementary students.
I'm the author of Craft Moves (Stenhouse Publishers, 2016) and the co-author of Jump Into Writing (Zaner-Bloser, 2021), Welcome to Writing Workshop (Stenhouse Publishers, 2019), and Day By Day (Stenhouse, 2010).
Thank you! I have been searching for a kid-friendly dictionary site for the past few months and never came across Wordsmyth. It is exactly what I am looking for!
Sarah
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I love Wordsmyth dictionary for “kid friendly” definitions of vocabulary words. Have you looked at http://www.spellngcity.com I enter in the words and the kids play the games for practice.
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