On Your Way with Dr. Christina Williams

Christina Williams

Dr. Christy is an educator turned entrepreneur who equips teachers to move their students from struggling to soaring -- FAST -- and to even make it FUN.

  1. 11/03/2025

    OYW How To Provide Multiple Exposures to the Words You've Featured/ Intentionally Noticed Mini Episode #5

    When I was teaching second grade, one of my students said, “Dr. Williams, last year we sang this song, and I want our class to sign it too.” Boy, am I glad I listened to him! That song was such a powerful tool to end our days together. It’s sung to the tune of “London Bridge is Falling Down” and it goes: What did you learn in school today? School today. School today. What did you learn in school today? Tell us, _Easton_. (You name a person in the group.)    My promise to my students was that every single day they came into our classroom they would learn something they didn’t already know. Singing that song at the end of the day reminded kids of what, exactly, they did learn. It could be that cred means believe. It could be that o-o can say /ew/ or /oo/. It could be that Our neighbors to the north of the United States are Canadians or students could even say something like, “Nick is a great reading partner.” Anything goes here! When we sang that song, I had real hope that when my students got home and were asked, “What’d you learn in school today?” instead of mumbling “Nuthin’,” my students would have a great response ready.  I also sent home a newsletter at least once a month. In that newsletter, I shared what our focuses were for each subject area, and I often challenged parents to ask their children to perform a task so they could see what their kids been learning. Sometimes I said, “Ask your child to sing the short vowel song I taught them.” Sometimes it was, “Ask your child to draw a compass rose with the cardinal directions.” Sometimes it was “Ask your child to teach you the nines trick for multiplication.” This review is quite powerful, because everyone’s impressed! Kids are inspired to learn and grow when it’s acknowledged. OYW with Dr. Christina Williams

    11 min
  2. 05/09/2025

    OYW How to Teach "Sight Words"

    Every parent in my school community knows about sight words. They may be called star words, snap words, or something else, but we know what they are. Early childhood classrooms feature from 25 to more than 100 words students must know on sight by the end of the school year. That\'s not a problem-the fluent reading of words. The problem can be in how those words are taught.Does your child say the when the word is and? How about and for the word said? In my first grade classroom, at the beginning of the year, this happens quite frequently. I call it the \"Guess and Go\" syndrome. I believe this kind of reading error is a result of children being taught sight words. They are taught to recall how words look. They are not taught to make the sounds they see, from left to right, across the word. If they had been taught to make the sounds they see, children would not say see when they come to the word look.Teachers often post the students\' sight words on the walls of their classrooms. They review each word frequently. The children are asked to practice using the words in various ways. Eventually, the word sticks in the memories of the students. If it doesn\'t stick quickly enough, parents are asked to make flashcards for the words to review them with their children.Here\'s the problem: When taught to rely on their memory of how words look, children are prone to make errors in their reading. So what do I recommend?I believe that we must return to the Sound by Sound approach (left to right) and reserve the Sight Word approach (memorizing words) for the words that do not follow phonics guidelines. Even the words I call \"true sight words\" have the expected initial sounds.

    26 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

Dr. Christy is an educator turned entrepreneur who equips teachers to move their students from struggling to soaring -- FAST -- and to even make it FUN.