Tuesday, October 9, 2012

The Six Strands of Language-Explained!

Next up on the Curriculum Map is The Six Strands of Language.  It is these six strands which form the base of the Story Grammar Marker: Pragmatics, Phonology, Semantics, Syntax & Morphology, Discourse, and Metalinguistics.   Here is how they are defined by SGM:

  • Pragmatics - the social uses of language
  • Phonology - the sound system tapped for oral language production, decoding, and spelling.
  • Semantics - the meanings of words and their relationship to each other within and across sentence boundaries.
  • Syntax & Morphology - the word order and complexity of clausal structures as well as the addition/omission of endings such as -ed and -ing.
  • Discourse - the level of oral language or print that is beyond the level of the single sentence.
  • Metalinguistics - the acquired process of manipulating language as an object rather than a means of communication.

These strands are then described further and given sub-categories.  I am using the six strands themselves as my annual goals and the sub-categories as guidelines for my short-term objectives.

  • Pragmatics
    • eye contact
    • noise
    • space
    • body language
    • tone of voice
    • feedback
    • turn taking
    • topic maintenance
    • comments
    • clarification
  • Phonology
    • spelling
    • articulation
    • phonemic awareness
    • sound symbol relationships
  • Semantics
    • words
    • multiple meanings
    • experiential scripts/schema or content
    • word relationships within a sentence
    • cohesive devices
    • figurative language
  • Syntax & Morphology
    • word order
    • cohesive ties
    • verb tense
    • morphology
  • Discourse
    • conversation
    • narrative
    • exposition
  • Metalinguistics
    • rhyme
    • perspective
    • self-monitoring
    • figurative language
    • segmentation
    • manipulation

I introduce each of these strands by reading a book or watching a video that demonstrates each one or at least an aspect of it and then facilitate a discussion.  I created these simple little yarn tools to give kids a visual aid to help internalize these concepts.  All I did was assign a color to each of the 6 strands, bought yarn in those colors, cut it up into 6 inch pieces and tied the 6 colors together.  Super simple but really helped the kids associate a color to each of the areas.  I also decorated the big bulletin board behind my desk with these strands and definitions.


This has been just a brief overview of the Six Strands of Language as described in the Story Grammar Marker manual.  I will do a post very soon reflecting on my week introducing all the strands.  There were things that worked very well and things that I definitely would have done differently!  

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